English

Living a discrete life in a continuous world: Reference with distributed representations

Computation and Language 2017-09-05 v2

Abstract

Reference is a crucial property of language that allows us to connect linguistic expressions to the world. Modeling it requires handling both continuous and discrete aspects of meaning. Data-driven models excel at the former, but struggle with the latter, and the reverse is true for symbolic models. This paper (a) introduces a concrete referential task to test both aspects, called cross-modal entity tracking; (b) proposes a neural network architecture that uses external memory to build an entity library inspired in the DRSs of DRT, with a mechanism to dynamically introduce new referents or add information to referents that are already in the library. Our model shows promise: it beats traditional neural network architectures on the task. However, it is still outperformed by Memory Networks, another model with external memory.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1702.01815,
  title  = {Living a discrete life in a continuous world: Reference with distributed representations},
  author = {Gemma Boleda and Sebastian Padó and Nghia The Pham and Marco Baroni},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1702.01815},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

Accepted at IWCS 2017. Final version, 9 pages

R2 v1 2026-06-22T18:10:56.505Z