September 7, 2017
A number of recent works have proposed techniques for end-to-end learning of communication protocols among cooperative multi-agent populations, and have simultaneously found the emergence of grounded human-interpretable language in the protocols developed by the agents, learned without any human supervision!
In this paper, using a Task & Talk reference game between two agents as a testbed, we present a sequence of ‘negative’ results culminating in a ‘positive’ one – showing that while most agent-invented languages are effective (i.e. achieve near-perfect task rewards), they are decidedly not interpretable or compositional. In essence, we find that natural language does not emerge ‘naturally’, despite the semblance of ease of natural-language-emergence that one may gather from recent literature. We discuss how it is possible to coax the invented languages to become more and more human-like and compositional by increasing restrictions on how two agents may communicate.
Research Topics
November 16, 2022
Kushal Tirumala, Aram H. Markosyan, Armen Aghajanyan, Luke Zettlemoyer
November 16, 2022
October 31, 2022
Fabio Petroni, Giuseppe Ottaviano, Michele Bevilacqua, Patrick Lewis, Scott Yih, Sebastian Riedel
October 31, 2022
December 06, 2020
Michael Lewis, Armen Aghajanyan, Gargi Ghosh, Luke Zettlemoyer, Marjan Ghazvininejad, Sida Wang
December 06, 2020
November 30, 2020
Dhruv Batra, Devi Parikh, Meera Hahn, Jacob Krantz, James Rehg, Peter Anderson, Stefan Lee
November 30, 2020
April 30, 2018
Yedid Hoshen, Lior Wolf
April 30, 2018
November 01, 2018
Yedid Hoshen, Lior Wolf
November 01, 2018
December 02, 2018
Sagie Benaim, Lior Wolf
December 02, 2018
June 30, 2019
Geng Ji, Dehua Cheng, Huazhong Ning, Changhe Yuan, Hanning Zhou, Liang Xiong, Erik B. Sudderth
June 30, 2019
Foundational models
Latest news
Foundational models