State-of-the-art semantic parsers rely on auto-regressive decoding, emitting one symbol at a time. When tested against complex databases that are unobserved at training time (zero-shot), the parser often struggles to select the correct set of database constants in the new database, due to the local nature of decoding. In this work, we propose a semantic parser that globally reasons about the structure of the output query to make a more contextually-informed selection of database constants. We use message-passing through a graph neural network to softly select a subset of database constants for the output query, conditioned on the question. Moreover, we train a model to rank queries based on the global alignment of database constants to question words. We apply our techniques to the current state-of-the-art model for Spider, a zero-shot semantic parsing dataset with complex databases, increasing accuracy from 39.4% to 47.4%.
Global Reasoning over Database Structures for Text-to-SQL Parsing
A semantic parser using graph neural networks for global reasoning improves accuracy in zero-shot parsing by selecting relevant database constants.
- Year
- 2019
- Venue
- arXiv 2019
- Authors
- 3
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/1908.11214ARXIV-DEFAULT
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