English

Quantifying the Task-Specific Information in Text-Based Classifications

Computation and Language 2021-10-19 v1

Abstract

Recently, neural natural language models have attained state-of-the-art performance on a wide variety of tasks, but the high performance can result from superficial, surface-level cues (Bender and Koller, 2020; Niven and Kao, 2020). These surface cues, as the ``shortcuts'' inherent in the datasets, do not contribute to the *task-specific information* (TSI) of the classification tasks. While it is essential to look at the model performance, it is also important to understand the datasets. In this paper, we consider this question: Apart from the information introduced by the shortcut features, how much task-specific information is required to classify a dataset? We formulate this quantity in an information-theoretic framework. While this quantity is hard to compute, we approximate it with a fast and stable method. TSI quantifies the amount of linguistic knowledge modulo a set of predefined shortcuts -- that contributes to classifying a sample from each dataset. This framework allows us to compare across datasets, saying that, apart from a set of ``shortcut features'', classifying each sample in the Multi-NLI task involves around 0.4 nats more TSI than in the Quora Question Pair.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2110.08931,
  title  = {Quantifying the Task-Specific Information in Text-Based Classifications},
  author = {Zining Zhu and Aparna Balagopalan and Marzyeh Ghassemi and Frank Rudzicz},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2110.08931},
  year   = {2021}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-24T06:57:36.413Z