Wiradee Imrattanatrai
2025
ProMQA: Question Answering Dataset for Multimodal Procedural Activity Understanding
Kimihiro Hasegawa
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Wiradee Imrattanatrai
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Zhi-Qi Cheng
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Masaki Asada
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Susan Holm
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Yuran Wang
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Ken Fukuda
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Teruko Mitamura
Proceedings of the 2025 Conference of the Nations of the Americas Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies (Volume 1: Long Papers)
Multimodal systems have great potential to assist humans in procedural activities, where people follow instructions to achieve their goals. Despite diverse application scenarios, systems are typically evaluated on traditional classification tasks, e.g., action recognition or temporal action localization. In this paper, we present a novel evaluation dataset, ProMQA, to measure the advancement of systems in application-oriented scenarios. ProMQA consists of 401 multimodal procedural QA pairs on user recording of procedural activities, i.e., cooking, coupled with their corresponding instruction. For QA annotation, we take a cost-effective human-LLM collaborative approach, where the existing annotation is augmented with LLM-generated QA pairs that are later verified by humans. We then provide the benchmark results to set the baseline performance on ProMQA. Our experiment reveals a significant gap between human performance and that of current systems, including competitive proprietary multimodal models. We hope our dataset sheds light on new aspects of models’ multimodal understanding capabilities.
2023
End-to-End Task-Oriented Dialogue Systems Based on Schema
Wiradee Imrattanatrai
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Ken Fukuda
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: ACL 2023
This paper presents a schema-aware end-to-end neural network model for handling task-oriented dialogues based on a dynamic set of slots within a schema. Contrary to existing studies that proposed end-to-end approaches for task-oriented dialogue systems by relying on a unified schema across domains, we design our approach to support a domain covering multiple services where diverse schemas are available. To enable better generalizability among services and domains with different schemas, we supply the schema’s context information including slot descriptions and value constraints to the model. The experimental results on a well-known Schema-Guided Dialogue (SGD) dataset demonstrated the performance improvement by the proposed model compared to state-of-the-art baselines in terms of end-to-end modeling, dialogue state tracking task, and generalization on new services and domains using a limited number of dialogues.
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Co-authors
- Ken Fukuda 2
- Masaki Asada 1
- Zhi-Qi Cheng 1
- Kimihiro Hasegawa 1
- Susan Holm 1
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