Kevin Chen-Chuan Chang


2022

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Are Large Pre-Trained Language Models Leaking Your Personal Information?
Jie Huang | Hanyin Shao | Kevin Chen-Chuan Chang
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: EMNLP 2022

Are Large Pre-Trained Language Models Leaking Your Personal Information? In this paper, we analyze whether Pre-Trained Language Models (PLMs) are prone to leaking personal information. Specifically, we query PLMs for email addresses with contexts of the email address or prompts containing the owner’s name. We find that PLMs do leak personal information due to memorization. However, since the models are weak at association, the risk of specific personal information being extracted by attackers is low. We hope this work could help the community to better understand the privacy risk of PLMs and bring new insights to make PLMs safe.

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Understanding Jargon: Combining Extraction and Generation for Definition Modeling
Jie Huang | Hanyin Shao | Kevin Chen-Chuan Chang | Jinjun Xiong | Wen-mei Hwu
Proceedings of the 2022 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing

Can machines know what twin prime is? From the composition of this phrase, machines may guess twin prime is a certain kind of prime, but it is still difficult to deduce exactly what twin stands for without additional knowledge. Here, twin prime is a jargon - a specialized term used by experts in a particular field. Explaining jargon is challenging since it usually requires domain knowledge to understand. Recently, there is an increasing interest in extracting and generating definitions of words automatically. However, existing approaches, either extraction or generation, perform poorly on jargon. In this paper, we propose to combine extraction and generation for jargon definition modeling: first extract self- and correlative definitional information of target jargon from the Web and then generate the final definitions by incorporating the extracted definitional information. Our framework is remarkably simple but effective: experiments demonstrate our method can generate high-quality definitions for jargon and outperform state-of-the-art models significantly, e.g., BLEU score from 8.76 to 22.66 and human-annotated score from 2.34 to 4.04.

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DEER: Descriptive Knowledge Graph for Explaining Entity Relationships
Jie Huang | Kerui Zhu | Kevin Chen-Chuan Chang | Jinjun Xiong | Wen-mei Hwu
Proceedings of the 2022 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing

We propose DEER (Descriptive Knowledge Graph for Explaining Entity Relationships) - an open and informative form of modeling entity relationships. In DEER, relationships between entities are represented by free-text relation descriptions. For instance, the relationship between entities of machine learning and algorithm can be represented as “Machine learning explores the study and construction of algorithms that can learn from and make predictions on data.” To construct DEER, we propose a self-supervised learning method to extract relation descriptions with the analysis of dependency patterns and generate relation descriptions with a transformer-based relation description synthesizing model, where no human labeling is required. Experiments demonstrate that our system can extract and generate high-quality relation descriptions for explaining entity relationships. The results suggest that we can build an open and informative knowledge graph without human annotation.

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Coordinated Topic Modeling
Pritom Saha Akash | Jie Huang | Kevin Chen-Chuan Chang
Proceedings of the 2022 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing

We propose a new problem called coordinated topic modeling that imitates human behavior while describing a text corpus. It considers a set of well-defined topics like the axes of a semantic space with a reference representation. It then uses the axes to model a corpus for easily understandable representation. This new task helps represent a corpus more interpretably by reusing existing knowledge and benefits the corpora comparison task. We design ECTM, an embedding-based coordinated topic model that effectively uses the reference representation to capture the target corpus-specific aspects while maintaining each topic’s global semantics. In ECTM, we introduce the topic- and document-level supervision with a self-training mechanism to solve the problem. Finally, extensive experiments on multiple domains show the superiority of our model over other baselines.

2010

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Object Search: Supporting Structured Queries in Web Search Engines
Kim Pham | Nicholas Rizzolo | Kevin Small | Kevin Chen-Chuan Chang | Dan Roth
Proceedings of the NAACL HLT 2010 Workshop on Semantic Search