Entailment has been recognized as an important metric for evaluating natural language understanding (NLU) models, and recent studies have found that entailment pretraining benefits weakly supervised fine-tuning. In this work, we design a prompting strategy that formulates a number of different NLU tasks as contextual entailment. This approach improves the zero-shot adaptation of pretrained entailment models. Secondly, we notice that self-training entailment-based models with unlabeled data can significantly improve the adaptation performance on downstream tasks. To achieve more stable improvement, we propose the Simple Pseudo-Label Editing (SimPLE) algorithm for better pseudo-labeling quality in self-training. We also found that both pretrained entailment-based models and the self-trained models are robust against adversarial evaluation data. Experiments on binary and multi-class classification tasks show that SimPLE leads to more robust self-training results, indicating that the self-trained entailment models are more efficient and trustworthy than large language models on language understanding tasks.
Entailment as Robust Self-Learner
A prompting strategy for contextual entailment and the Simple Pseudo-Label Editing (SimPLE) algorithm improve self-training and robustness of entailment models in NLU tasks.
- Year
- 2023
- Venue
- arXiv 2023
- Authors
- 4
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2305.17197ARXIV-DEFAULT
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