Linganisha mbinu
Pitia mbinu ulizochagua bega kwa bega; safu zinazotofautiana zinaangaziwa.
| Utohozi wa Maandishi× | Uainishaji wa Hali-ya-Sifuri× | |
|---|---|---|
| Nyanja | Uchimbaji wa Matini | Uchimbaji wa Matini |
| Familia | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Mwaka wa asili≠ | — | 2019 |
| Mwanzilishi≠ | — | Yin, Hay & Roth |
| Aina≠ | NLP sentence-pair classification task | NLP text-classification task |
| Chanzo asilia≠ | Dagan, I., Glickman, O. & Magnini, B. (2006). The PASCAL Recognising Textual Entailment Challenge. link ↗ | Yin, W., Hay, J. & Roth, D. (2019). Benchmarking Zero-shot Text Classification: Datasets, Evaluation and Entailment Approach. EMNLP, 3914-3923. DOI ↗ |
| Majina mbadala≠ | natural language inference, NLI, recognising textual entailment, RTE | zero-shot text classification, entailment-based classification, Sıfır Atışlı Sınıflandırma (Zero-Shot Classification) |
| Zinazohusiana≠ | 4 | 3 |
| Muhtasari≠ | Textual entailment, also known as natural language inference (NLI), is the natural-language-processing task of deciding whether one piece of text (the premise) entails a second piece of text (the hypothesis), contradicts it, or is neutral with respect to it. Formalised by the PASCAL Recognising Textual Entailment Challenge (Dagan, Glickman & Magnini, 2006) and broadened by the MultiNLI corpus (Williams, Nangia & Bowman, 2018), it underpins question answering and fact-verification pipelines. | Zero-shot classification is a natural-language-processing task that assigns text to categories described in plain language without requiring any labelled training data. Formalised as an entailment problem by Yin, Hay and Roth (2019), it lets a large pretrained language model recognise new categories on the fly simply by naming them, enabling rapid adaptation to fresh label sets. |
| ScholarGateSeti ya data ↗ |
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