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Human vs. Muppet: A Conservative Estimate of Human Performance on the GLUE Benchmark

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arxiv 1905.10425 v3 pith:UECJTQ2C submitted 2019-05-24 cs.CL cs.AI

Human vs. Muppet: A Conservative Estimate of Human Performance on the GLUE Benchmark

classification cs.CL cs.AI
keywords benchmarkhumanperformanceannotatorsgluelearnprogressaverage
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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The GLUE benchmark (Wang et al., 2019b) is a suite of language understanding tasks which has seen dramatic progress in the past year, with average performance moving from 70.0 at launch to 83.9, state of the art at the time of writing (May 24, 2019). Here, we measure human performance on the benchmark, in order to learn whether significant headroom remains for further progress. We provide a conservative estimate of human performance on the benchmark through crowdsourcing: Our annotators are non-experts who must learn each task from a brief set of instructions and 20 examples. In spite of limited training, these annotators robustly outperform the state of the art on six of the nine GLUE tasks and achieve an average score of 87.1. Given the fast pace of progress however, the headroom we observe is quite limited. To reproduce the data-poor setting that our annotators must learn in, we also train the BERT model (Devlin et al., 2019) in limited-data regimes, and conclude that low-resource sentence classification remains a challenge for modern neural network approaches to text understanding.

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