Ask what’s missing and what’s useful: Improving Clarification Question Generation using Global Knowledge
- Bodhisattwa Prasad Majumder ,
- Sudha Rao ,
- Michel Galley ,
- Julian J. McAuley
North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies |
Published by Association for Computational Linguistics
The ability to generate clarification questions i.e., questions that identify useful missing information in a given context, is important in reducing ambiguity. Humans use previous experience with similar contexts to form a global view and compare it to the given context to ascertain what is missing and what is useful in the context. Inspired by this, we propose a model for clarification question generation where we first identify what is missing by taking a difference between the global and the local view and then train a model to identify what is useful and generate a question about it. Our model outperforms several baselines as judged by both automatic metrics and humans.