Joint embedding of words and labels for text classification

302Citations
Citations of this article
537Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Word embeddings are effective intermediate representations for capturing semantic regularities between words, when learning the representations of text sequences. We propose to view text classification as a label-word joint embedding problem: each label is embedded in the same space with the word vectors. We introduce an attention framework that measures the compatibility of embeddings between text sequences and labels. The attention is learned on a training set of labeled samples to ensure that, given a text sequence, the relevant words are weighted higher than the irrelevant ones. Our method maintains the interpretability of word embeddings, and enjoys a built-in ability to leverage alternative sources of information, in addition to input text sequences. Extensive results on the several large text datasets show that the proposed framework outperforms the state-of-the-art methods by a large margin, in terms of both accuracy and speed.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Wang, G., Li, C., Wang, W., Zhang, Y., Shen, D., Zhang, X., … Carin, L. (2018). Joint embedding of words and labels for text classification. In ACL 2018 - 56th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics, Proceedings of the Conference (Long Papers) (Vol. 1, pp. 2321–2331). Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL). https://doi.org/10.18653/v1/p18-1216

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free