Learning to Retrieve Engaging Follow-Up Queries

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Abstract

Open domain conversational agents can answer a broad range of targeted queries. However, the sequential nature of interaction with these systems makes knowledge exploration a lengthy task which burdens the user with asking a chain of well phrased questions. In this paper, we present a retrieval based system and associated dataset for predicting the next questions that the user might have. Such a system can proactively assist users in knowledge exploration leading to a more engaging dialog. The retrieval system is trained on a dataset called the Follow-up Query Bank (FQ-Bank). FQ-Bank contains ≈14K multi-turn information-seeking conversations with a valid follow-up question and a set of invalid candidates. The invalid candidates are generated to simulate various syntactic and semantic confounders such as paraphrases, partial entity match, irrelevant entity, and ASR errors. We use confounder specific techniques to simulate these negative examples on the OR-QuAC dataset. Then, we train ranking models on FQ-Bank and present results comparing supervised and unsupervised approaches. The results suggest that we can retrieve the valid follow-ups by ranking them in higher positions compared to confounders, but further knowledge grounding can improve ranking performance. FQ-Bank is publicly available at https://github.com/amazon-science/fq-bank.

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APA

Richardson, C., Kar, S., Kumar, A., Ramachandran, A., Khan, O. Z., Raeesy, Z., & Sethy, A. (2023). Learning to Retrieve Engaging Follow-Up Queries. In EACL 2023 - 17th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics, Findings of EACL 2023 (pp. 1964–1971). Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL). https://doi.org/10.18653/v1/2023.findings-eacl.149

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