The recent explosion in work on neural topic modeling has been criticized for optimizing automated topic evaluation metrics at the expense of actual meaningful topic identification. But human annotation remains expensive and time-consuming. We propose LLM-based methods inspired by standard human topic evaluations, in a family of metrics called Contextualized Topic Coherence (CTC). We evaluate both a fully automated version as well as a semi-automated CTC that allows human-centered evaluation of coherence while maintaining the efficiency of automated methods. We evaluate CTC relative to five other metrics on six topic models and find that it outperforms automated topic coherence methods, works well on short documents, and is not susceptible to meaningless but high-scoring topics.
Contextualized Topic Coherence Metrics
LLM-based Contextualized Topic Coherence (CTC) offers improved topic evaluation by combining automation and human-centered assessment, outperforming existing automated methods while addressing their shortcomings.
- Year
- 2023
- Venue
- arXiv 2023
- Authors
- 6
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2305.14587ARXIV-DEFAULT
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