Abstract
We have constructed a new “Who-did-What” dataset of over 200,000 fill-in-the-gap (cloze) multiple choice reading comprehension problems constructed from the LDC English Gigaword newswire corpus. The WDW dataset has a variety of novel features. First, in contrast with the CNN and Daily Mail datasets (Hermann et al., 2015) we avoid using article summaries for question formation. Instead, each problem is formed from two independent articles - an article given as the passage to be read and a separate article on the same events used to form the question. Second, we avoid anonymization - each choice is a person named entity. Third, the problems have been filtered to remove a fraction that are easily solved by simple baselines, while remaining 84% solvable by humans. We report performance benchmarks of standard systems and propose the WDW dataset as a challenge task for the community.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Onishi, T., Wang, H., Bansal, M., Gimpel, K., & McAllester, D. (2016). Who did what: A large-scale person-centered cloze dataset. In EMNLP 2016 - Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing, Proceedings (pp. 2230–2235). Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL). https://doi.org/10.18653/v1/d16-1241
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