Animesh Nighojkar

Ph.D. Student


Curriculum vitae



Advancing Machine and Human Reasoning (AMHR) Lab

University of South Florida



Can Transformer Language Models Predict Psychometric Properties?


Journal article


A. Laverghetta, Animesh Nighojkar, Jamshidbek Mirzakhalov, John Licato
STARSEM, 2021

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APA   Click to copy
Laverghetta, A., Nighojkar, A., Mirzakhalov, J., & Licato, J. (2021). Can Transformer Language Models Predict Psychometric Properties? STARSEM.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Laverghetta, A., Animesh Nighojkar, Jamshidbek Mirzakhalov, and John Licato. “Can Transformer Language Models Predict Psychometric Properties?” STARSEM (2021).


MLA   Click to copy
Laverghetta, A., et al. “Can Transformer Language Models Predict Psychometric Properties?” STARSEM, 2021.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{a2021a,
  title = {Can Transformer Language Models Predict Psychometric Properties?},
  year = {2021},
  journal = {STARSEM},
  author = {Laverghetta, A. and Nighojkar, Animesh and Mirzakhalov, Jamshidbek and Licato, John}
}

Abstract

Transformer-based language models (LMs) continue to advance state-of-the-art performance on NLP benchmark tasks, including tasks designed to mimic human-inspired “commonsense” competencies. To better understand the degree to which LMs can be said to have certain linguistic reasoning skills, researchers are beginning to adapt the tools and concepts of the field of psychometrics. But to what extent can the benefits flow in the other direction? I.e., can LMs be of use in predicting what the psychometric properties of test items will be when those items are given to human participants? We gather responses from numerous human participants and LMs (transformer- and non-transformer-based) on a broad diagnostic test of linguistic competencies. We then use the responses to calculate standard psychometric properties of the items in the diagnostic test, using the human responses and the LM responses separately. We then determine how well these two sets of predictions match. We find cases in which transformer-based LMs predict psychometric properties consistently well in certain categories but consistently poorly in others, thus providing new insights into fundamental similarities and differences between human and LM reasoning.


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