scholarly journals Trick Me If You Can: Human-in-the-Loop Generation of Adversarial Examples for Question Answering

2019 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
pp. 387-401 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eric Wallace ◽  
Pedro Rodriguez ◽  
Shi Feng ◽  
Ikuya Yamada ◽  
Jordan Boyd-Graber

Adversarial evaluation stress-tests a model’s understanding of natural language. Because past approaches expose superficial patterns, the resulting adversarial examples are limited in complexity and diversity. We propose human- in-the-loop adversarial generation, where human authors are guided to break models. We aid the authors with interpretations of model predictions through an interactive user interface. We apply this generation framework to a question answering task called Quizbowl, where trivia enthusiasts craft adversarial questions. The resulting questions are validated via live human–computer matches: Although the questions appear ordinary to humans, they systematically stump neural and information retrieval models. The adversarial questions cover diverse phenomena from multi-hop reasoning to entity type distractors, exposing open challenges in robust question answering.

Author(s):  
Marja-Riitta Koivunen ◽  
Ora Lassila ◽  
Juha Ahvo ◽  
Minna Rankinen ◽  
Sirpa Riihiaho ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Sreevatsa Vangala

Smart polling system is an android application that facilitates user (voter), nominee and administrator (who will be in charge and will verify all the user information) to participate in online voting. Our smart polling system is highly secured, and it has a simple and interactive user interface. The proposed online portal is secured and have unique security feature such as unique id generation that adds another layer of security (except login id and password) and gives admin the ability to verify the user information and to decide whether he is eligible to vote or not. It also creates and manages voting and election details as all the users must login by user name and password and click on candidates to register vote.


2000 ◽  
Vol 6 (S2) ◽  
pp. 288-289
Author(s):  
J. Pulokas ◽  
N. Kisseberth ◽  
C.S. Potter ◽  
B. Carragher

For several years we have been developing a software application, called Leginon, for the automated control and acquisition of images from a transmission electron microscope. The system has been developed around a Philips CM200 and a Gatan MSC CCD camera. One of the primary motivations in developing this software is to provide for a system that can acquire many hundreds of images under low dose conditions from a specimen embedded in vitreous ice. In order to set up and manage this system we have developed a number of simple interactive graphical tools that enable the user to design, oversee and manage protocols for controlling the microscope and collecting the images. Many of these simple tools have also proved generally useful as stand alone applications.


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