The rapid growth of research in explainable artificial intelligence (XAI) follows on two substantial developments. First, the enormous application success of modern machine learning methods, especially deep and reinforcement learning, have created high expectations for industrial, commercial, and social value. Second, the emerging and growing concern for creating ethical and trusted AI systems, including compliance with regulatory principles to ensure transparency and trust. These two threads have created a kind of “perfect storm” of research activity, all motivated to create and deliver any set of tools and techniques to address the XAI demand. As some surveys of current XAI suggest, there is yet to appear a principled framework that respects the literature of explainability in the history of science and which provides a basis for the development of a framework for transparent XAI. We identify four foundational components, including the requirements for (1) explicit explanation knowledge representation, (2) delivery of alternative explanations, (3) adjusting explanations based on knowledge of the explainee, and (4) exploiting the advantage of interactive explanation. With those four components in mind, we intend to provide a strategic inventory of XAI requirements, demonstrate their connection to a basic history of XAI ideas, and then synthesize those ideas into a simple framework that can guide the design of AI systems that require XAI.
Multi-label emotion classification is an important task in NLP and is essential to many applications.In this work, we propose a sequence-to-emotion (Seq2Emo) approach, which implicitly models emotion correlations in a bi-directional decoder. Experiments on SemEval'18 and GoEmotions datasets show that our approach outperforms state-of-the-art methods (without using external data). In particular, Seq2Emo outperforms the binary relevance (BR) and classifier chain (CC) approaches in a fair setting. 1
The rapid growth of research in explainable artificial intelligence (XAI) follows on two substantial developments. First, the enormous application success of modern machine learning methods, especially deep and reinforcement learning, which have created high expectations for industrial, commercial and social value.Second, the emergence of concern for creating trusted AI systems, including the creation of regulatory principles to ensure transparency and trust of AI systems.These two threads have created a kind of "perfect storm" of research activity, all eager to create and deliver any set of tools and techniques to address the XAI demand.As some surveys of current XAI suggest, there is yet to appear a principled framework that respects the literature of explainability in the history of science, and which provides a basis for the development of a framework for transparent XAI. Here we intend to provide a strategic inventory of XAI requirements, demonstrate their connection to a history of XAI ideas, and synthesize those ideas into a simple framework to calibrate five successive levels of XAI.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.