Emmanuel Dupoux
2020
Compositionality and Generalization In Emergent Languages
Rahma Chaabouni
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Eugene Kharitonov
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Diane Bouchacourt
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Emmanuel Dupoux
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Marco Baroni
Proceedings of the 58th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics
Natural language allows us to refer to novel composite concepts by combining expressions denoting their parts according to systematic rules, a property known as compositionality. In this paper, we study whether the language emerging in deep multi-agent simulations possesses a similar ability to refer to novel primitive combinations, and whether it accomplishes this feat by strategies akin to human-language compositionality. Equipped with new ways to measure compositionality in emergent languages inspired by disentanglement in representation learning, we establish three main results: First, given sufficiently large input spaces, the emergent language will naturally develop the ability to refer to novel composite concepts. Second, there is no correlation between the degree of compositionality of an emergent language and its ability to generalize. Third, while compositionality is not necessary for generalization, it provides an advantage in terms of language transmission: The more compositional a language is, the more easily it will be picked up by new learners, even when the latter differ in architecture from the original agents. We conclude that compositionality does not arise from simple generalization pressure, but if an emergent language does chance upon it, it will be more likely to survive and thrive.
Identification of Primary and Collateral Tracks in Stuttered Speech
Rachid Riad
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Anne-Catherine Bachoud-Lévi
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Frank Rudzicz
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Emmanuel Dupoux
Proceedings of The 12th Language Resources and Evaluation Conference
Disfluent speech has been previously addressed from two main perspectives: the clinical perspective focusing on diagnostic, and the Natural Language Processing (NLP) perspective aiming at modeling these events and detect them for downstream tasks. In addition, previous works often used different metrics depending on whether the input features are text or speech, making it difficult to compare the different contributions. Here, we introduce a new evaluation framework for disfluency detection inspired by the clinical and NLP perspective together with the theory of performance from (Clark, 1996) which distinguishes between primary and collateral tracks. We introduce a novel forced-aligned disfluency dataset from a corpus of semi-directed interviews, and present baseline results directly comparing the performance of text-based features (word and span information) and speech-based (acoustic-prosodic information). Finally, we introduce new audio features inspired by the word-based span features. We show experimentally that using these features outperformed the baselines for speech-based predictions on the present dataset.
Seshat: a Tool for Managing and Verifying Annotation Campaigns of Audio Data
Hadrien Titeux
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Rachid Riad
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Xuan-Nga Cao
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Nicolas Hamilakis
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Kris Madden
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Alejandrina Cristia
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Anne-Catherine Bachoud-Lévi
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Emmanuel Dupoux
Proceedings of The 12th Language Resources and Evaluation Conference
We introduce Seshat, a new, simple and open-source software to efficiently manage annotations of speech corpora. The Seshat software allows users to easily customise and manage annotations of large audio corpora while ensuring compliance with the formatting and naming conventions of the annotated output files. In addition, it includes procedures for checking the content of annotations following specific rules that can be implemented in personalised parsers. Finally, we propose a double-annotation mode, for which Seshat computes automatically an associated inter-annotator agreement with the gamma measure taking into account the categorisation and segmentation discrepancies.