CometKiwi: IST-Unbabel 2022 Submission for the Quality Estimation Shared Task
read the original abstract
We present the joint contribution of IST and Unbabel to the WMT 2022 Shared Task on Quality Estimation (QE). Our team participated on all three subtasks: (i) Sentence and Word-level Quality Prediction; (ii) Explainable QE; and (iii) Critical Error Detection. For all tasks we build on top of the COMET framework, connecting it with the predictor-estimator architecture of OpenKiwi, and equipping it with a word-level sequence tagger and an explanation extractor. Our results suggest that incorporating references during pretraining improves performance across several language pairs on downstream tasks, and that jointly training with sentence and word-level objectives yields a further boost. Furthermore, combining attention and gradient information proved to be the top strategy for extracting good explanations of sentence-level QE models. Overall, our submissions achieved the best results for all three tasks for almost all language pairs by a considerable margin.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 2 Pith papers
-
Universal Reasoner: A Single, Composable Plug-and-Play Reasoner for Frozen LLMs
UniR is a composable reasoning module trained with verifiable rewards and added to frozen LLMs via logit summation, enabling modular composition and weak-to-strong generalization across tasks and model sizes.
-
Why Do Safety Guardrails Degrade Across Languages?
A latent variable IRT framework decouples four safety-driving factors across 61 model configurations and 10 languages using 1.9 million evaluations, revealing that safety is largely unidimensional and that high cross-...
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.