Hybrid Autoregressive Inference for Scalable Multi-hop Explanation Regeneration

Marco Valentino, Mokanarangan Thayaparan, Deborah Mendes Ferreira, Andre Freitas

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

Abstract

Regenerating natural language explanations in the scientific domain has been proposed as a benchmark to evaluate complex multi-hop and explainable inference. In this context, large language models can achieve state-of-the-art performance when employed as cross-encoder architectures and fine-tuned on human-annotated explanations. However, while much attention has been devoted to the quality of the explanations, the problem of performing inference efficiently is largely under-studied. Cross-encoders, in fact, are intrinsically not scalable, possessing limited applicability to real world scenarios that require inference on massive facts banks.
To enable complex multi-hop reasoning at scale, this paper focuses on bi-encoder architectures, investigating the problem of scientific explanation regeneration at the intersection of dense and sparse models. Specifically, we present SCAR (for Scalable Autoregressive Inference), a hybrid framework that iteratively combines a Transformer-based bi-encoder with a sparse model of explanatory power, designed to leverage explicit inference patterns in the explanations. Our experiments demonstrate that the hybrid framework significantly outperforms previous sparse models, achieving performance comparable with that of state-of-the-art cross-encoders while being ≈ 50 times faster and scalable to corpora of millions of facts. Further analyses on semantic drift and multi-hop question answering reveal that the proposed hybridisation boosts the quality of the most challenging explanations, contributing to improved performance on downstream inference tasks.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publication36th AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 1 Dec 2021

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Hybrid Autoregressive Inference for Scalable Multi-hop Explanation Regeneration'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this