Learning Knowledge Graphs for Question Answering through Conversational Dialog

We describe how a question-answering sys-tem can learn about its domain from conversational dialogs. Our system learns to relate concepts in science questions to propositions in a fact corpus, stores new concepts and relations in a knowledge graph (KG), and uses the graph to solve questions. We are the ﬁrst to acquire knowledge for question-answering from open, natural language dialogs without a ﬁxed ontology or domain model that predeter-mines what users can say. Our relation-based strategies complete more successful dialogs than a query expansion baseline, our task-driven relations are more effective for solving science questions than relations from general knowledge sources, and our method is practical enough to generalize to other domains.


Introduction
Our goal is a question-answering (QA) system that learns about its domain from users in open, natural language dialogs. Dialog learning interfaces built on top of existing QA systems can complement and refine knowledge acquired from other sources. Even large QA systems such as Watson (Ferrucci et al., 2010) that utilize heavy domain engineering could benefit from focused dialogs to dynamically improve their knowledge. A successful QA system requires domain knowledge. For example, 4th grade science questions are difficult since they often exclude knowledge necessary to relate answers to known facts. The question in Figure 1 asks if an iron nail conducts electricity; S1: Here's the question: Which object is the best conductor of electricity? (A) a wax crayon (B) a plastic spoon (C) a rubber eraser (D) an iron nail. I'm not sure of the answer. What do you think the answer is? U1: iron nail S2: Why do you think the answer is (D) an iron nail? U2: electricity goes through metal S3: I know "metals are shiny and good conductors of electricity and heat," does that mean that the answer is (D) an iron nail? U3: yeah S4: Okay, great. What's the relationship between 'electricity' and 'iron', if any? U4: iron conducts electricity because its metal S5: Okay, great, I get it! The answer is (D) an iron nail Figure 1: Top: A successful real user dialog. Openended prompts (S1&S2) encourage conversational explanations. Focused prompts (S4) target particular relations. Bottom: Corresponding knowledge graph consisting of relations between concepts.
the system only knows that metal conducts electricity, and it needs to learn that iron is a metal in order to answer the question with the relevant fact.
Our dialog system, KNOWBOT, conducts dialogs about science questions and learns how concepts in each question relate to propositions in a corpus of science facts. KNOWBOT presents its user with a question (line S1 in Figure 1), prompts them to choose and explain their answer, and extracts relations -any semantic relationship between two con-cepts, such as metal to iron (line U4 in Figure 1)that increase its confidence in the user's answer.
Relation extraction systems such as NELL (Carlson et al., 2010) use ontologies to predetermine valid relation types and arguments, then scan text to fill the ontology with facts. Open Information Extraction (Etzioni et al., 2011) avoids fixed ontologies with domain-independent linguistic features, distant supervision, and redundancy, but requires web-scale text and doesn't improve with interaction. Like Open IE, we extract relations without predetermined types, but are the first to do so from dialog.
KNOWBOT is an open dialog system, which means a user utterance may progress the dialog task even if its underlying action is not explicitly represented in a dialog model. This lets KNOWBOT quickly bootstrap domain knowledge from users without significant engineering overhead. Dialogdriven extraction produces effective relations without annotation, improves after each interaction, acquires relations useful on a particular task, and embeds relations in a rich dialog context.
Users successfully correct the system in approximately 50% of dialogs even without a predetermined dialog model. A baseline query expansion (Bast et al., 2007) strategy that bases decisions on the acquisition of new keywords instead of new relations results in only a 5% success rate. In comparison to paraphrase relations from general knowledge bases, relations acquired by our method are more effective as domain knowledge, demonstrating that we successfully learn from real users.
Our contributions include: 1. The first end-to-end system to construct knowledge graphs for question-answering through conversational dialog.

2.
A generalizable method to represent the meaning of user utterances without a dialog model when task progression can be computed as a function of extracted relations.
3. A novel data set of real user dialogs in which users correct a QA system's answer, together with knowledge graphs representing the important concepts and relations in each question, labeled with rich dialog features.

Conversational extraction for QA
Our QA task consists of 107 science questions from the 4th grade New York Regents exam . 1 Each question has four possible answers. We convert each of the four question-answer pairs into a true/false question-answer statement using a small number of pattern-based transformation rules. Just as 4th graders read their textbooks for answers, we collect SCITEXT , a corpus of unlabeled true-false natural language sentences from science textbooks, study guides, and Wikipedia Science. Each question-answer statement is associated with a subset of true/false support sentences from SCITEXT based on positive word overlap between the question-answer pair and the support sentence. The degree to which a SCITEXT sentence supports a question-answer pair is the sentence's alignment score (section 2.3).
Initially, the alignment score depends on keyword overlap alone, but SCITEXT needs domain knowledge to answer our questions. For example, the correct question-answer statement to What form of energy causes an ice cube to melt? (A) mechanical (B) magnetic (C) sound (D) heat is Q (D) , "Heat is a form of energy and heat causes an ice cube to melt." To better align Q (D) to the SCITEXT sentence "A snowball melting in your hand is an example of heat energy," we need to know that snowballs are made of ice. Figure 2 illustrates this example.
To construct a knowledge base with which to use SCITEXT, we extract concepts (section 2.1) from questions and SCITEXT sentences, then use relations (section 2.2) between concepts to determine which question-answer statement Q i is most highly aligned with a supporting SCITEXT sentence.

Concepts
A concept keyword in a sentence or user utterance is any non-stopword of at least three characters. Stopwords are domain-independent, lowinformation words such as "the." A concept is a set of concept keywords with a common root, e.g. {melts, melted, melting} or {heat, heats, heated}. We use the Porter algorithm for stemming (Porter, 1997). Question concepts ap-pear in a question-answer statement, and support concepts appear in a SCITEXT support sentence.

Relations
A relation is any pair of concepts that represents a semantic correspondence. In general, relations can be labeled with any feature that describes the correspondence, such as a particular type. For example, the relation between Obama and Hawaii can be labeled with the type born-in.
A predetermined ontology is typically required to label relations with their type. In this work we label acquired relations with dialog-specific features. Our thesis is that user explanations intend to relate concepts together, and the system's task is to determine the user's intent. For example, the user utterance U: it's melting because of heat relates the concepts represented by melt[ing] and heat, with the words because of appearing between the two concept keywords. We refer to because of as the relation's intext.
Relations can be intuitively arranged as a knowledge graph, which in this work is any graph whose nodes are concepts and whose edges are relations between those concepts, in the spirit of semantic networks such as ConceptNet (Havasi et al., 2007).

Sentence alignment
We calculate the alignment score α between the ith question-answer statement Q i and its jth supporting SCITEXT sentence S i,j as the normalized number of relations between their concepts, where C Q i is the set of concepts in Q i , C S i,j is the set of concepts in S i,j , and R Q i ,S i,j is the number of relations between C Q i and C S i,j . Normalized relation count is a practical semantic similarity score that generalizes to different knowledge representations. The dialog in Figure 2 aligns Q (D) with the SCITEXT fact S by learning from the user that, for example, heat is related to melting.

The KNOWBOT dialog system
KNOWBOT grows a knowledge graph of commonsense semantic relations in open, conversational dialog. Figure 2 traces the growth of a knowledge graph over a single dialog. Section 3.1 details how knowledge is extracted from user explanations without a dialog model. Section 3.2 describes dialog strategies that elicit natural language explanations.
KNOWBOT uses task progress to drive natural language understanding. It assumes the user intends to provide one or more novel relations, and uses the constraints described in section 3.1.1 to disambiguate noisy relations. This way, KNOWBOT knows when the dialog progresses because its confidence in the user's chosen answer increases.

Building knowledge graphs from dialog
KNOWBOT builds KGs at three levels: per utterance, per dialog, and globally over all dialogs. An utterance-level knowledge graph (uKG) (Figure 2a) is a fully connected graph whose nodes are all concepts in an utterance. After aggressive pruning (section 3.1.1), remaining edges update a dialog-level knowledge graph (dKG) (Figure 2b; section 3.1.2).
Upon dialog termination, the dKG updates the global knowledge graph (gKG), which stores relations acquired from all dialogs (section 3.1.3).

Utterance-level KGs
KNOWBOT initially relates every pair of concepts in an utterance, then prunes them based on two constraints: alignment and adjacency.
Each user explanation is first converted into a fully-connected utterance-level knowledge graph. This uKG is noisy because users don't intend relations between every pair of keywords in their utterance. For example, a typical utterance U: freezes means it changes water from a liquid to a solid mentions six concepts, freezing, meaning, change, water, liquid, solid, with 6 2 potential binary relations. Not every relation is salient to the question. To remove noisy relations, edges in the uKG are aggressively pruned with two simple, rational constraints: 1. Alignment. An edge can only relate a question concept to a support concept.
2. Adjacency. Edges can't relate concepts whose keywords are adjacent in the utterance.
The intuition for the alignment constraint is that the user intends each explanation to relate the question to a known fact, and other relations in the utterance are unintentional. For example, in the uKG for the first utterance in Figure 2(a), the edge between melt[ing] and heat is an alignment relation because melt[ing] is a concept in S and heat is a concept in Q. But the edge between because and heat is pruned (dashed lines) since because is not a concept in S. Adjacency is a simple, practical syntactic feature to reduce spurious relations. Users typically put words or intexts between concepts they intend to relate. The edge between melt[ing] and because is pruned since their keywords are adjacent in U1: it's melting because of heat, while U2 relates snow and ice with the intext has the same behavior as the.
We find these constraints effective in practice, but at this point other pruning constraints can be deployed. A strength of our approach is that it welcomes aggressive pruning: just as in human-human interaction, users who initially fail to communicate their intention can try again later in the dialog.

Dialog-level KGs
Each dialog focuses on a single question. KNOW-BOT starts with an empty dialog-level knowledge graph (dKG). After each user turn, edges from that turn's uKG are added to the dKG, and KNOWBOT rescores each of the four answers according to equation (1) where the set of relations R Q i ,S i,j is exactly the set of edges in the dKG. The dialog successfully terminates when the user's answer has the highest alignment score, indicating the "missing knowledge" has been successfully provided by the user.

The global knowledge graph
The global knowledge graph (gKG) includes every relation learned from every KNOWBOT dialog.
Because we do not use a fixed ontology or comprehensive dialog model, individual dialogs can result in noisy relations even after aggressive pruning. However, as KNOWBOT conducts more dialogs about the same problem, relations that more often re-occur are more likely to be salient to the problem.
In this work, KNOWBOT takes advantage of redundancy with a simple filter: it ignores singleton relations originating in a single user utterance. We find even this simple filter increases performance. As KNOWBOT accumulates more dialogs, frequency can be incorporated in more sophisticated models.

Dialog strategies for knowledge acquisition
We've described how a user's free text explanations are converted into knowledge graphs. Each user explanation is uttered in response to a system prompt. A dialog system's dialog manager chooses the prompt to say next according to its dialog strategy, which maps each system state to an action. An effective dialog strategy guides users to informative explanations that provide novel relations which let KNOWBOT successfully answer the question.
We compare two different strategies. A userinitiative strategy always asks open-ended questions to prompt the user for new explanations, e.g. line S2 in Figure 1. These prompts let users introduce salient concepts on their own.
In contrast, a mixed-initiative strategy utilizes focused prompts (line S4 in Figure 1) to introduce potentially related concepts. KNOWBOT chooses what pair of concepts to ask about based on how discriminative they are. The most discriminative concepts are the pair of question and support concepts that (1) don't already have an edge between them, (2) satisfies the alignment constraint for the user's answer, and (3) satisfies the alignment constraint for the fewest alternative answers. By proposing relations that would lead to a swift completion of the dialog task, KNOWBOT shares the burden of knowledge acquisition with the user.
Both dialog strategies are question-independent, but because we don't use a comprehensive dialog model to represent the state space, we rely on hand built rules instead of optimizing with respect to a reward function. For example, KNOWBOT always starts by asking the user for their answer, and if a new support sentence is found will always immediately present it to the user for confirmation.

Evaluation of dialog strategies
Our first experiment compares mixed-initiative and user-initiative strategies (section 3.2) to a baseline interactive query expansion (section 4.1). The purpose of this experiment is to investigate whether users can successfully complete our complex dialog task even though we don't use a trained semantic parser for natural language understanding.
Dialogs were conducted through a web browser. Users were colleagues and interns at the Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence, and so were familiar with the question-answering task but were not expert annotators. Users were invited to converse with the system of their choice, and to move on to a new question if they felt the dialog was not progressing. Individual dialog sessions were anonymous.
The system starts each dialog with an empty knowledge graph, using only identity relations to select its answer. This default answer is correct on 44 of the 107 questions, and an additional 10 questions have no associated supporting sentence for the correct answer in SCITEXT. We run dialogs for the remaining 53 questions, for which each answer candidate has 80 supporting sentences in SCITEXT on average. A successful dialog terminates when the system extracts enough novel relations from the user that the correct answer has the highest alignment score with one of its supporting sentences.

Baseline: Interactive query expansion
To evaluate whether task-driven relation extraction is an effective method for knowledge acquisition in the absence of an explicit dialog model, we also implement a baseline dialog strategy based on interactive query expansion (IQE). This baseline is similar to the recent knowledge acquisition dialog system of Rudnicky and Pappu (2014a;2014b).
In IQE, new knowledge is learned in the form of novel keywords that are appended to the questionanswer statement. For example, the dialog in Figure  1 shows the user teaching KNOWBOT how metal relates to electricity. KNOWBOT understands that the user intends that relation because it drives the dialog forward. IQE, in contrast, treats the user utterance as an unstructured bag of keywords. The unrecognized word "metal" is added to the bag of keywords representing each of the four alternative answers to form four augmented queries, and new overlap scores against sentences from SCITEXT are computed. The dialog progresses whenever a new vocabulary word increases the score for the augmented query for the user's chosen answer.
The intuition behind query expansion is that users will explain their answers with salient keywords missing from the original question sentence. The expanded query will overlap with and uprank a support sentence that contains the acquired keywords.

Performance metrics
Task completion is the proportion of dialogs that end in agreement. Higher task completion indicates that the dialog system is more successful in acquir-ing enough knowledge by the end of the dialog to change its answer from incorrect to correct.
Dialog length is the number of system and user turns. Shorter dialogs are more efficient.
Acquisition rate is the number of edges in the dKG at the end of each dialog. Acquisition rate measures two contrasting system features: (1) how much new knowledge is acquired, and (2) how much explanatory effort users expend. From the perspective of raw knowledge acquisition, higher acquisition rate is better because each dialog adds more edges to the knowledge graph. From the perspective of usability, lower acquisition rate is better provided it doesn't negatively affect dialog success, because it indicates the user is able to successfully correct the system's answer with a fewer number of explanatory relations.

Results
Our results (Table 1)  We find that the baseline has a very low completion rate of 5%, and longer dialog lengths of 14 turns on average. Interactive query expansion is a poor knowledge acquisition dialog strategy for our task.
In contrast, users were able to successfully correct our system using both strategies about 50% of the time, even though no in-domain ontology guides extractions and no comprehensive dialog model clas-sifies explanations. The average dialog lengths and completion rate for User Initiative (U.I.) and Mixed Initiative (M.I.) strategies was approximately the same, so that choice of strategy had little impact on overall task success. However, strategy has a great effect on acquisition rate. M.I. cuts the knowledge acquisition rate nearly in half when compared to U.I (7.4 novel relations per dialog to 13.5). M.I. learns fewer new relations per dialog with comparable task success, which means each dialog succeeds with much less explanatory effort by the user but also contributes less to the knowledge graph.
User comments indicated that the mixed-initiative strategy was the most enjoyable system to use. We find that open-ended, user-initiative strategies can acquire more helpful relations in a single dialog but guided, mixed-initiative strategies may be more appropriate when usability is taken into account. Because our goal is lifelong interactive knowledge acquisition, the impact of a single dialog on the total knowledge graph is less important than the individual user effort required, and we conclude that the mixed-initiative strategy is preferable.

Evaluation of knowledge quality
Experiment 1 evaluated whether users could successfully complete our dialog task. Next, we evaluate whether the total output of our system, all relations acquired during all 431 conducted dialogs, represents useful domain knowledge on this task. We evaluate on questions for which dialogs have been held to investigate whether it's possible to learn any domain knowledge from natural language conversation without a dialog model, irrespective of overfitting. We then use cross-validation to test if knowledge transfers between questions.
As described in section 2, our QA system decomposes each question/answer pair into a true/false statement and chooses as its answer the statement among the four that has the best supporting sentence in a text corpus. Equation (1) scores each questionanswer statement by using domain relations to align question concepts to support concepts. The next section describes sources of domain relations.

Sources of domain knowledge
We compare relations from five sources: IDENTITY: An edgeless knowledge graph. The only relations are between identical concepts, equivalent to Jaccard overlap of concept keyword roots.
WORDNET: Paraphrase relations from Wordnet. Wordnet (Fellbaum, 1998) is a lexical database of synonyms and hypernyms common in NLP tasks. For example, Snow et al (2006) use Wordnet as training data for ontology induction. To build WORDNET, we draw an edge between every pair of Wordnet concepts (w s , w q ) for which the Wu-Palmer Similarity (WUP) (Wu and Palmer, 1994) of the first sense in each concept's synset exceeds 0.9, the best-performing WUP threshold we found. Concepts in the Wordnet hierarchy have a higher WUP when they have a closer common ancestor. If a known fact is Heat energy causes snow to melt, but a question asks if ice melts, then Wordnet should provide the missing knowledge that ice acts like snow.
PPDB: Paraphrase relations from PPDB (Ganitkevitch et al., 2013) are derived by aligning bilingual parallel texts. PPDB is divided into subsets where the larger subsets have more paraphrases with less precision. We tried all subsets and found the smallest to give the best results, which we report here. The largest performed the worst of all relation sets we tested. We use the lexical paraphrases, which relates unigrams. Concepts are related when at least one concept keyword for each are paraphrases in PPDB. We obtained better performance by stemming PPDB words: for example, if snows and iced are paraphrases in PPDB then we also considered snowing and icy to be in PPDB.
KNOWBOT: Each question is answered using relations pooled from all dialogs about all questions. The goal in each dialog is to acquire knowledge helpful to answer the question. If KNOWBOT leads to an increase in QA accuracy over IDENTITY, then we can successfully use open dialog with a human in the loop to learn knowledge that solves a question.
LEAVE-ONE-OUT: Each question is answered only with relations learned during dialogs for every other question. While KNOWBOT uses relations learned from dialogs about the questions on those same questions, LEAVE-ONE-OUT tests whether knowledge generalizes to questions without dialogs. Generalization is only possible when there are at least two questions involving the same concepts. Due to our small number of questions, in the best case we expect only slight improvement. Table 2: QA accuracy on the 107 questions with different sources of domain knowledge. IDENTITY: identity relations only, e.g. "heats" to "heating." WORD-NET: Wordnet-derived pseudo-synonyms, e.g. "eagle" to "owl." KNOWBOT: the full, unablated global KG. LEAVE-ONE-OUT: answers each question while ignoring relations acquired during dialogs on that question.

Results
The results of QA using the different domain knowledge is shown in Table 2. IDENTITY achieves 41% accuracy on this difficult reasoning task, showing that some questions are answerable by searching SCITEXT for supporting sentences with the same concepts as in the question-answer statement. WORDNET works surprisingly poorly. Examination found WORDNET's relations to be of good quality, yet underperform IDENTITY. PPDB performed better but still underperformed IDENTITY. We conclude that general paraphrase bases introduce too much noise to apply directly without manual curation to our science domain, underscoring the need for domain-specific knowledge acquisition. KNOWBOT achieves accuracy of 57%, a dramatic improvement over both baselines. Importantly, this value does not test generalization to unseen questions, since KNOWBOT has held dialogs on these questions. However, it does show that our system can effectively learn about its domain: a poor dialog extraction system will fail to extract any helpful knowledge from users during a training dialog. This is a significant result because it shows that we successfully acquire knowledge to solve many question through conversational interaction without the overhead of a closed dialog model or fixed ontology.
We also tested how well knowledge generalizes with LEAVE-ONE-OUT. Our question set is less suited to evaluate generalization because it covers a wide range of topics with little overlap between questions. We still found LEAVE-ONE-OUT to be the second-best performer with accuracy of 45%, a 10% relative improvement versus IDENTITY. Redundancy is an effective noise reduction constraint: when LEAVE-ONE-OUT ignores redundancy and includes singleton relations (those originating in a single dialog utterance), its accuracy reduces to 32%.

Related work
Knowledge acquisition in dialog has long been a central goal of AI research. Early dialog systems acquired knowledge through ambitious interaction, but were brittle, required hand-defined dialog models and did not scale. Terry Winograd (1972) presented the first dialog system that acquires knowledge about the block world. TEIRESIAS (Davis, 1977) refines inference rules from terse interaction with experts. CONVINCE (Kim and Pearl, 1987) and its prototypes (Leal and Pearl, 1977) learn decision structures through stylized but conversational dialogs. An interactive interface for CYC (Witbrock et al., 2003) learns from experts but don't use natural language. Fernández et al (2011) argue the importance of interactive language learning for conversational agents. Williams et al (2015) combine active learning and dialog to efficiently label training data for dialog act classifiers.
Relatively little work integrates relation extraction and dialog systems. Attribute-value pairs from restaurant reviews can generate system prompts (Reschke et al., 2013), and single-turn exchanges with search engines can populate a knowledge graph (Hakkani-Tur et al., 2014). Dependency relations extracted from individual dialog utterances by a parser also make effective features for dialog act classification (Klüwer et al., 2010).
The work closest to our own, Pappu and Rudnicky (2014a;2014b), investigates knowledge acquisition strategies for academic events. Their system asks its users open-ended questions in order to elicit information about academic events of interest. They compare strategies by how many new vocabulary words are acquired, so that the best strategy prompts the user to mention the most OOV words. In their most recent work (2014b), they group the acquired researcher names by their interests to form a bipartite graph, and use acquired keywords for query ex-pansion in a simple information retrieval task. Our present contribution builds on this general idea, but we learn an unlimited number of relations and concepts from open dialogs, whereas they learn a small number of relations belonging to a fixed ontology from closed dialogs. We also show the acquired knowledge is objectively useful for QA.
In closed dialog systems, the system's dialog model explicitly represents the meaning of every potential user utterance. Any utterance not represented by this comprehensive model is rejected and the user asked to rephrase. Closed dialog systems work well in practice. For example, in the well-studied slotfilling or frame-filling model, users fill slots to constrain their goal, and an NLU module decomposes user utterances to known actions, slots, and values. A slot-filling system to find flights might map the utterance U: Show me a flight from Nashville to Seattle on Sunday to the action find-flight and the filled slots origin = Nashville, destination = Seattle, and time = Sunday. However, for our domain, each distinct question warrants its own actions, slots, and values. Such a complex model would require abundant training data or laboriously handcrafted interpretation rules.
In contrast, an open dialog system can usefully interpret, learn from, and respond to user utterances without a comprehensive dialog model. Domainindependent dialog systems with the flexibility to accept novel user utterances are a longstanding goal in dialog research (Polifroni et al., 2003). Recent work to address more open dialog includes bootstrapping a semantic parser from unlabeled dialogs (Artzi and Zettlemoyer, 2011), extracting potential user goals and system responses from backend databases (Hixon and Passonneau, 2013), and inducing slots and slot-fillers from a corpus of humanhuman dialogs with the use of FrameNet . These works focus on systems that learn about their domain prior to any human-system dialog. Our system learns about its domain during the dialog. While we rely on a limited number of templates to generate system responses, unscripted user utterances can usefully progress the dialog. This allows relation extraction from complex natural language utterances without a closed set of recognized actions and known slot-value decompositions. 7 Discussion and Future Work KNOWBOT acquires helpful, task-driven relations from conversational dialogs in a difficult QA domain. A dialog is a success when it produces knowledge to solve the question. Extractions increase QA accuracy on questions for which dialogs have been held, indicating that knowledge acquisition dialogs can succeed without a closed dialog model by using task progress and careful pruning to drive natural language understanding. Our method is general enough to scale to any task in which alternative dialog goals can be presented to a user and the system's confidence in each alternative computed from semantic relations between concepts.
Our focus is on facilitated knowledge acquisition rather than question-answering, so we purposefully keep inference simple. The alignment score is a Jaccard overlap modified to use relations, which makes it fast and practical, but results in many ties which we score as incorrect, and also ignores word order. For example, the bag-of-keywords is identical for contradicting answers "changing from liquid to solid" and "changing from solid to liquid." To make this distinction, we could use an alignment score that is sensitive to word order such as an edit distance. We could expand our simple pruning constraints to take more advantage of syntax, for example by using dependency parsers optimized for conversational language (Kong et al., 2014).
The relational model for reasoning is both flexible and powerful (Liu and Singh, 2004). However, in a small number of cases, relations that align known facts with question-answer statements are unlikely to lead to the correct answer. For example, our question set contains a single math problem, How long does it take for Earth to rotate on its axis seven times? (A) one day (B) one week (C) one month (D) one year. The multiplication operation necessary to infer the answer from the SCITEXT fact "The Earth rotates, or spins, on its axis once every 24 hours" is not easily represented by our model and requires other techniques (Hosseini et al., 2014).
We observed only slight transfer of knowledge between questions. A larger question set with multiple questions per topic will allow us to better evaluate knowledge transfer. Our long-term goal is learning through any conversational interaction in a com-pletely open domain, but because the fundamental trick that enables model-free NLU is computing progress towards an explicit dialog goal as a function of possible extractions, our current method is limited to tasks with explicit goals.
The simple redundancy filter we use effectively distinguishes salient from noisy relations, but could be improved with a model of relation frequency. We consider all acquired relations equally salient, but future work will examine how to rank relation saliency. We will also examine how dialog features can help distinguish between paraphrase, entailment, and negative relations.
Our open system acquires relations from a wide variety of user explanations without the bottleneck of a hand-built dialog model, but the tradeoff is that we use relatively simple, templated system prompts. However, our collected corpus of real human-system dialogs can be used to improve our system in further iterations. For example, the knowledge graphs we produce are targeted, question-specific semantic networks, which could be used in lieu of FrameNet to induce domain-specific dialog models . With a dialog model to represent the state space, reinforcement learning could then be employed to optimize our strategies.
While most question-answering systems focus on factoid questions, reasoning tasks such as ours require different techniques. Our method generalizes to other non-factoid QA tasks which could usefully employ relations, such as arithmetic word problems (Hosseini et al., 2014) and biology reading comprehension questions (Berant et al., 2014).