Jiyuan Zhang
2022
Hierarchical Representation-based Dynamic Reasoning Network for Biomedical Question Answering
Jianguo Mao
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Jiyuan Zhang
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Zengfeng Zeng
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Weihua Peng
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Wenbin Jiang
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Xiangdong Wang
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Hong Liu
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Yajuan Lyu
Proceedings of the 29th International Conference on Computational Linguistics
Recently, Biomedical Question Answering (BQA) has attracted growing attention due to its application value and technical challenges. Most existing works treat it as a semantic matching task that predicts answers by computing confidence among questions, options and evidence sentences, which is insufficient for scenarios that require complex reasoning based on a deep understanding of biomedical evidences. We propose a novel model termed Hierarchical Representation-based Dynamic Reasoning Network (HDRN) to tackle this problem. It first constructs the hierarchical representations for biomedical evidences to learn semantics within and among evidences. It then performs dynamic reasoning based on the hierarchical representations of evidences to solve complex biomedical problems. Against the existing state-of-the-art model, the proposed model significantly improves more than 4.5%, 3% and 1.3% on three mainstream BQA datasets, PubMedQA, MedQA-USMLE and NLPEC. The ablation study demonstrates the superiority of each improvement of our model. The code will be released after the paper is published.
2017
Flexible and Creative Chinese Poetry Generation Using Neural Memory
Jiyuan Zhang
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Yang Feng
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Dong Wang
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Yang Wang
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Andrew Abel
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Shiyue Zhang
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Andi Zhang
Proceedings of the 55th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)
It has been shown that Chinese poems can be successfully generated by sequence-to-sequence neural models, particularly with the attention mechanism. A potential problem of this approach, however, is that neural models can only learn abstract rules, while poem generation is a highly creative process that involves not only rules but also innovations for which pure statistical models are not appropriate in principle. This work proposes a memory augmented neural model for Chinese poem generation, where the neural model and the augmented memory work together to balance the requirements of linguistic accordance and aesthetic innovation, leading to innovative generations that are still rule-compliant. In addition, it is found that the memory mechanism provides interesting flexibility that can be used to generate poems with different styles.
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Co-authors
- Yang Feng 1
- Dong Wang 1
- Yang Wang 1
- Andrew Abel 1
- Shiyue Zhang 1
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