Interpretability for Language Learners Using Example-Based Grammatical Error Correction
Abstract
Grammatical Error Correction (GEC) should not focus only on high accuracy of corrections but also on interpretability for language learning. However, existing neural-based GEC models mainly aim at improving accuracy, and their interpretability has not been explored. A promising approach for improving interpretability is an example-based method, which uses similar retrieved examples to generate corrections. In addition, examples are beneficial in language learning, helping learners understand the basis of grammatically incorrect/correct texts and improve their confidence in writing. Therefore, we hypothesize that incorporating an example-based method into GEC can improve interpretability as well as support language learners. In this study, we introduce an Example-Based GEC (EB-GEC) that presents examples to language learners as a basis for a correction result. The examples consist of pairs of correct and incorrect sentences similar to a given input and its predicted correction. Experiments demonstrate that the examples presented by EB-GEC help language learners decide to accept or refuse suggestions from the GEC output. Furthermore, the experiments also show that retrieved examples improve the accuracy of corrections.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2203.07085,
title = {Interpretability for Language Learners Using Example-Based Grammatical Error Correction},
author = {Masahiro Kaneko and Sho Takase and Ayana Niwa and Naoaki Okazaki},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2203.07085},
year = {2022}
}
Comments
ACL 2022