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Reflect, Not Reflex: Inference-Based Common Ground Improves Dialogue Response Quality

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arxiv 2211.09267 v1 pith:KDZ5DXN7 submitted 2022-11-16 cs.CL cs.AIcs.LG

Reflect, Not Reflex: Inference-Based Common Ground Improves Dialogue Response Quality

classification cs.CL cs.AIcs.LG
keywords responsesmodelsqualityreflectdatacommoncurrentground
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Human communication relies on common ground (CG), the mutual knowledge and beliefs shared by participants, to produce coherent and interesting conversations. In this paper, we demonstrate that current response generation (RG) models produce generic and dull responses in dialogues because they act reflexively, failing to explicitly model CG, both due to the lack of CG in training data and the standard RG training procedure. We introduce Reflect, a dataset that annotates dialogues with explicit CG (materialized as inferences approximating shared knowledge and beliefs) and solicits 9k diverse human-generated responses each following one common ground. Using Reflect, we showcase the limitations of current dialogue data and RG models: less than half of the responses in current data are rated as high quality (sensible, specific, and interesting) and models trained using this data have even lower quality, while most Reflect responses are judged high quality. Next, we analyze whether CG can help models produce better-quality responses by using Reflect CG to guide RG models. Surprisingly, we find that simply prompting GPT3 to "think" about CG generates 30% more quality responses, showing promising benefits to integrating CG into the RG process.

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