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Consistency of a Recurrent Language Model With Respect to Incomplete Decoding

Sean Welleck, Ilia Kulikov, Jaedeok Kim, Richard Yuanzhe Pang, Kyunghyun Cho

202037 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Despite strong performance on a variety of tasks, neural sequence models trained with maximum likelihood have been shown to exhibit issues such as length bias and degenerate repetition. We study the related issue of receiving infinite-length sequences from a recurrent language model when using common decoding algorithms. To analyze this issue, we first define inconsistency of a decoding algorithm, meaning that the algorithm can yield an infinite-length sequence that has zero probability under the model. We prove that commonly used incomplete decoding algorithms -greedy search, beam search, top-k sampling, and nucleus sampling -are inconsistent, despite the fact that recurrent language models are trained to produce sequences of finite length. Based on these insights, we propose two remedies which address inconsistency: consistent variants of top-k and nucleus sampling, and a selfterminating recurrent language model. Empirical results show that inconsistency occurs in practice, and that the proposed methods prevent inconsistency.

Topics & Concepts

Decoding methodsSequence (biology)Computer scienceLanguage modelSampling (signal processing)Consistency (knowledge bases)Variety (cybernetics)Beam searchAlgorithmMeaning (existential)Repetition (rhetorical device)Theoretical computer scienceArtificial intelligenceSearch algorithmPsychologyLinguisticsPhilosophyFilter (signal processing)Computer visionBiologyPsychotherapistGeneticsTopic ModelingNatural Language Processing TechniquesMultimodal Machine Learning Applications
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