English

Evaluating and Characterizing Human Rationales

Computation and Language 2020-10-13 v1 Artificial Intelligence Computers and Society Human-Computer Interaction Machine Learning

Abstract

Two main approaches for evaluating the quality of machine-generated rationales are: 1) using human rationales as a gold standard; and 2) automated metrics based on how rationales affect model behavior. An open question, however, is how human rationales fare with these automatic metrics. Analyzing a variety of datasets and models, we find that human rationales do not necessarily perform well on these metrics. To unpack this finding, we propose improved metrics to account for model-dependent baseline performance. We then propose two methods to further characterize rationale quality, one based on model retraining and one on using "fidelity curves" to reveal properties such as irrelevance and redundancy. Our work leads to actionable suggestions for evaluating and characterizing rationales.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2010.04736,
  title  = {Evaluating and Characterizing Human Rationales},
  author = {Samuel Carton and Anirudh Rathore and Chenhao Tan},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2010.04736},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

14 pages, 15 figures, to appear in EMNLP 2020. Code is available at https://github.com/BoulderDS/evaluating-human-rationales