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We present an analysis into the inner workings of Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) for processing text. CNNs used for computer vision can be interpreted by projecting filters into image space, but for discrete sequence inputs CNNs remain a mystery. We aim to understand the method by which the networks process and classify text. We examine common hypotheses to this problem: that filters, accompanied by global max-pooling, serve as ngram detectors. We show that filters may capture several different semantic classes of ngrams by using different activation patterns, and that global max-pooling induces behavior which separates important ngrams from the rest. Finally, we show practical use cases derived from our findings in the form of model interpretability (explaining a trained model by deriving a concrete identity for each filter, bridging the gap between visualization tools in vision tasks and NLP) and prediction interpretability (explaining predictions).
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Jacovi et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a154b0e15658026c0822714 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.18653/v1/w18-5408
Alon Jacovi
Bar-Ilan University
Oren Sar Shalom
LinkedIn (United States)
Yoav Goldberg
Bar-Ilan University
Bar-Ilan University
Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence
IBM Research - Haifa
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