no code implementations • ICLR 2019 • Panos Achlioptas, Judy E. Fan, Robert X. D. Hawkins, Noah D. Goodman, Leo Guibas
We further show that a neural speaker that is `listener-aware' --- that plans its utterances according to how an imagined listener would interpret its words in context --- produces more discriminative referring expressions than an `listener-unaware' speaker, as measured by human performance in identifying the correct object.