Title
Original Content Is All You Need! an Empirical Study on Leveraging Answer Summary for WikiHowQA Answer Selection Task.
Abstract
Answer selection task requires finding appropriate answers to questions from informative but crowdsourced candidates. A key factor impeding its solution by current answer selection approaches is the redundancy and lengthiness issues of crowdsourced answers. Recently, Deng et al. (2020) constructed a new dataset, WikiHowQA, which contains a corresponding reference summary for each original lengthy answer. And their experiments show that leveraging the answer summaries helps to attend the essential information in original lengthy answers and improve the answer selection performance under certain circumstances. However, when given a question and a set of long candidate answers, human beings could effortlessly identify the correct answer without the aid of additional answer summaries since the original answers contain all the information volume that answer summaries contain. In addition, pretrained language models have been shown superior or comparable to human beings on many natural language processing tasks. Motivated by those, we design a series of neural models, either pretraining-based or non-pretraining-based, to check wether the additional answer summaries are helpful for ranking the relevancy degrees of question-answer pairs on WikiHowQA dataset. Extensive automated experiments and hand analysis show that the additional answer summaries are not useful for achieving the best performance.
Year
Venue
DocType
2022
International Conference on Computational Linguistics
Conference
Volume
Citations 
PageRank 
Proceedings of the 29th International Conference on Computational Linguistics
0
0.34
References 
Authors
0
8
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Liang Wen100.68
Juan Li21715.21
Hou-Feng Wang361153.83
Yingwei Luo431541.30
Xiaolin Wang515531.70
Xiaodong Zhang672.95
Zhicong Cheng700.68
Dawei Yin886661.99