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Learning with Weak Supervision for Email Intent Detection

Authors :
Shu, Kai
Mukherjee, Subhabrata
Zheng, Guoqing
Awadallah, Ahmed Hassan
Shokouhi, Milad
Dumais, Susan
Source :
ACM SIGIR 2020
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Email remains one of the most frequently used means of online communication. People spend a significant amount of time every day on emails to exchange information, manage tasks and schedule events. Previous work has studied different ways for improving email productivity by prioritizing emails, suggesting automatic replies or identifying intents to recommend appropriate actions. The problem has been mostly posed as a supervised learning problem where models of different complexities were proposed to classify an email message into a predefined taxonomy of intents or classes. The need for labeled data has always been one of the largest bottlenecks in training supervised models. This is especially the case for many real-world tasks, such as email intent classification, where large scale annotated examples are either hard to acquire or unavailable due to privacy or data access constraints. Email users often take actions in response to intents expressed in an email (e.g., setting up a meeting in response to an email with a scheduling request). Such actions can be inferred from user interaction logs. In this paper, we propose to leverage user actions as a source of weak supervision, in addition to a limited set of annotated examples, to detect intents in emails. We develop an end-to-end robust deep neural network model for email intent identification that leverages both clean annotated data and noisy weak supervision along with a self-paced learning mechanism. Extensive experiments on three different intent detection tasks show that our approach can effectively leverage the weakly supervised data to improve intent detection in emails.<br />Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
ACM SIGIR 2020
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2005.13084
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1145/3397271.3401121