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Answering Comparative Questions with Arguments (ACQuA 2.0)

Subject Area Image and Language Processing, Computer Graphics and Visualisation, Human Computer Interaction, Ubiquitous and Wearable Computing
Term from 2017 to 2024
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 376430233
 
In modern society, individuals are faced with choice problems on a daily basis. In this project, we combine methods from natural language processing and information retrieval to design a new kind of argumentative machine for comparative question answering. Such a machine satisfies the ubiquitous comparative information needs of users puzzled by a choice between abundant analogous objects (e.g., digital cameras, cities as travel destinations, or programming languages). Namely, the machine acts like a human expert in a respective field, taking a question as an input and suggesting the best object choice in the given context, supporting the answer with arguments. Similar to talking to human experts, interaction with the comparative argumentative machine is performed using natural language. The main scientific challenge of the project is to design a generic approach that yields a good coverage of objects and their aspects over various domains, as well as arguments for or against objects when compared with others but not relying on domain-specific resources. Some industrial systems are able to compare products in rather narrow domains, using specific manually created databases. Yet, even the most advanced industrial systems in the respective fields all have significant limitations satisfying comparative information needs robustly across domains. Currently, there is no methodology for answering comparative questions in general with reasonable coverage, which is precisely what we address in our project. To reach this goal, we propose a new approach involving several stages: (1) understanding comparative questions by users, (2) retrieving comparative argumentative structures relevant to a question from a web-scale text corpus, (3) gathering aspects of objects from a Wikipedia-based knowledge base enriched with aspects extracted from text, (4) comparison of objects on the basis of comparative argumentative structures and object aspects, (5) generation of arguments supporting the object choice, and (6) answer presentation. Key to our technology is a novel approach to argument mining that performs joint retrieval of documents relevant to the input question and extraction of complex argumentative structures from text. Our project will put argument mining in the context of the complex task of answering comparative questions, showing how argument mining can enable the creation of new kinds of semantic technologies. Prominent applications of the proposed comparative question answering approach are dialogue systems, decision support systems, and direct answers in web search engines.
DFG Programme Priority Programmes
 
 

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