2024
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From Zero to Hero: Cold-Start Anomaly Detection
Tal Reiss
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George Kour
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Naama Zwerdling
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Ateret Anaby Tavor
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Yedid Hoshen
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics ACL 2024
When first deploying an anomaly detection system, e.g., to detect out-of-scope queries in chatbots, there are no observed data, making data-driven approaches ineffective. Zero-shot anomaly detection methods offer a solution to such “cold-start” cases, but unfortunately they are often not accurate enough. This paper studies the realistic but underexplored cold-start setting where an anomaly detection model is initialized using zero-shot guidance, but subsequently receives a small number of contaminated observations (namely, that may include anomalies). The goal is to make efficient use of both the zero-shot guidance and the observations. We propose ColdFusion, a method that effectively adapts the zero-shot anomaly detector to contaminated observations. To support future development of this new setting, we propose an evaluation suite consisting of evaluation protocols and metrics.
2023
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Unveiling Safety Vulnerabilities of Large Language Models
George Kour
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Marcel Zalmanovici
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Naama Zwerdling
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Esther Goldbraich
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Ora Fandina
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Ateret Anaby Tavor
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Orna Raz
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Eitan Farchi
Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Natural Language Generation, Evaluation, and Metrics (GEM)
As large language models become more prevalent, their possible harmful or inappropriate responses are a cause for concern. This paper introduces a unique dataset containing adversarial examples in the form of questions, we call AttaQ, designed to provoke such harmful or inappropriate responses. We assess the efficacy of our dataset by analyzing the vulnerabilities of various models when subjected to it. Additionally, we introduce a novel automatic approach for identifying and naming vulnerable semantic regions — input semantic areas for which the model is likely to produce harmful outputs. This is achieved through the application of specialized clustering techniques that consider both the semantic similarity of the input attacks and the harmfulness of the model’s responses.Automatically identifying vulnerable semantic regions enhances the evaluation of model weaknesses, facilitating targeted improvements to its safety mechanisms and overall reliability.
2022
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Measuring the Measuring Tools: An Automatic Evaluation of Semantic Metrics for Text Corpora
George Kour
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Samuel Ackerman
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Eitan Daniel Farchi
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Orna Raz
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Boaz Carmeli
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Ateret Anaby Tavor
Proceedings of the 2nd Workshop on Natural Language Generation, Evaluation, and Metrics (GEM)
Similarity metrics for text corpora are becoming critical due to the tremendous growth in the number of generative models. These similarity metrics measure the semantic gap between human and machine-generated text on the corpus level. However, standard methods for evaluating the characteristics of these metrics have yet to be established. We propose a set of automatic measures for evaluating the characteristics of semantic similarity metrics for text corpora. Our measures allow us to sensibly compare and identify the strengths and weaknesses of these metrics. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our evaluation measures in capturing fundamental characteristics by comparing it to a collection of classical and state-of-the-art metrics. Our measures revealed that recent metrics are becoming better in identifying semantic distributional mismatch while classical metrics are more sensitive to perturbations in the surface text levels.
2020
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Balancing via Generation for Multi-Class Text Classification Improvement
Naama Tepper
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Esther Goldbraich
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Naama Zwerdling
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George Kour
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Ateret Anaby Tavor
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Boaz Carmeli
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: EMNLP 2020
Data balancing is a known technique for improving the performance of classification tasks. In this work we define a novel balancing-viageneration framework termed BalaGen. BalaGen consists of a flexible balancing policy coupled with a text generation mechanism. Combined, these two techniques can be used to augment a dataset for more balanced distribution. We evaluate BalaGen on three publicly available semantic utterance classification (SUC) datasets. One of these is a new COVID-19 Q&A dataset published here for the first time. Our work demonstrates that optimal balancing policies can significantly improve classifier performance, while augmenting just part of the classes and under-sampling others. Furthermore, capitalizing on the advantages of balancing, we show its usefulness in all relevant BalaGen framework components. We validate the superiority of BalaGen on ten semantic utterance datasets taken from real-life goaloriented dialogue systems. Based on our results we encourage using data balancing prior to training for text classification tasks.