数据集:
copenlu/fever_gold_evidence
Dataset for training classification-only fact checking with claims from the FEVER dataset. This dataset is used in the paper "Generating Label Cohesive and Well-Formed Adversarial Claims", EMNLP 2020
The evidence is the gold evidence from the FEVER dataset for REFUTE and SUPPORT claims. For NEI claims, we extract evidence sentences with the system in "Christopher Malon. 2018. Team Papelo: Transformer Networks at FEVER. In Proceedings of the First Workshop on Fact Extraction and VERification (FEVER), pages 109113." More details can be found in https://github.com/copenlu/fever-adversarial-attacks
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@inproceedings{atanasova-etal-2020-generating, title = "Generating Label Cohesive and Well-Formed Adversarial Claims", author = "Atanasova, Pepa and Wright, Dustin and Augenstein, Isabelle", booktitle = "Proceedings of the 2020 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing (EMNLP)", month = nov, year = "2020", address = "Online", publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics", url = "https://aclanthology.org/2020.emnlp-main.256", doi = "10.18653/v1/2020.emnlp-main.256", pages = "3168--3177", abstract = "Adversarial attacks reveal important vulnerabilities and flaws of trained models. One potent type of attack are universal adversarial triggers, which are individual n-grams that, when appended to instances of a class under attack, can trick a model into predicting a target class. However, for inference tasks such as fact checking, these triggers often inadvertently invert the meaning of instances they are inserted in. In addition, such attacks produce semantically nonsensical inputs, as they simply concatenate triggers to existing samples. Here, we investigate how to generate adversarial attacks against fact checking systems that preserve the ground truth meaning and are semantically valid. We extend the HotFlip attack algorithm used for universal trigger generation by jointly minimizing the target class loss of a fact checking model and the entailment class loss of an auxiliary natural language inference model. We then train a conditional language model to generate semantically valid statements, which include the found universal triggers. We find that the generated attacks maintain the directionality and semantic validity of the claim better than previous work.", }