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Quang DucNguyen
Fixing paper assignments
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Uncovering hidden topics from short texts is challenging for traditional and neural models due to data sparsity, which limits word co-occurrence patterns, and label sparsity, stemming from incomplete reconstruction targets. Although data aggregation offers a potential solution, existing neural topic models often overlook it due to time complexity, poor aggregation quality, and difficulty in inferring topic proportions for individual documents. In this paper, we propose a novel model, **GloCOM** (**Glo**bal **C**lustering C**O**ntexts for Topic **M**odels), which addresses these challenges by constructing aggregated global clustering contexts for short documents, leveraging text embeddings from pre-trained language models. GloCOM can infer both global topic distributions for clustering contexts and local distributions for individual short texts. Additionally, the model incorporates these global contexts to augment the reconstruction loss, effectively handling the label sparsity issue. Extensive experiments on short text datasets show that our approach outperforms other state-of-the-art models in both topic quality and document representations.
Recent advanced frameworks in topic models have significantly enhanced the performance compared to conventional probabilistic approaches. Such models, mostly constructed from neural network architecture together with other advanced techniques such as contextual embedding, optimal transport distance and pre-trained language model, etc. have effectively improved the topic quality and document topic distribution. Despite the improvements, these methods lack considerations of effective optimization for complex objective functions that contain log-likelihood and additional regularization terms. In this study, we propose to apply an efficient optimization method to improve the generalization and performance of topic models. Our approach explicitly considers the sharpness of the loss landscape during optimization, which forces the optimizer to choose directions in the parameter space that lead to flatter minima, in which the models are typically more stable and robust to small perturbations in the data. Additionally, we propose an effective strategy to select the flatness region for parameter optimization by leveraging the optimal transport distance between doc-topic distributions and doc-cluster proportions, which can effectively enhance document representation. Experimental results on popular benchmark datasets demonstrate that our method effectively improves the performance of baseline topic models.