Are Training Resources Insufficient? Predict First Then Explain!

29 Aug 2021  ·  Myeongjun Jang, Thomas Lukasiewicz ·

Natural language free-text explanation generation is an efficient approach to train explainable language processing models for commonsense-knowledge-requiring tasks. The most predominant form of these models is the explain-then-predict (EtP) structure, which first generates explanations and uses them for making decisions. The performance of EtP models is highly dependent on that of the explainer by the nature of their structure. Therefore, large-sized explanation data are required to train a good explainer model. However, annotating explanations is expensive. Also, recent works reveal that free-text explanations might not convey sufficient information for decision making. These facts cast doubts on the effectiveness of EtP models. In this paper, we argue that the predict-then-explain (PtE) architecture is a more efficient approach in terms of the modelling perspective. Our main contribution is twofold. First, we show that the PtE structure is the most data-efficient approach when explanation data are lacking. Second, we reveal that the PtE structure is always more training-efficient than the EtP structure. We also provide experimental results that confirm the theoretical advantages.

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