~ See the paper ~
Easy-to-use scripts for standardized evaluation of response generation on the MultiWOZ benchmark. This repository contains an implementation of the MultiWOZ database with fuzzy matching, functions for normalization of slot names and values, and a careful implementation of the BLEU score and Inform & Succes rates.
pip install git+https://github.com/Tomiinek/MultiWOZ_Evaluation.git@master
Use it directly from your code. Instantiate an evaluator and then call the evaluate
method with dictionary of your predictions with a specific format (described later). Set bleu
to evaluate the BLEU score, success
to get the Success & Inform rate, and use richness
for getting lexical richness metrics such as the number of unique unigrams, trigrams, token entropy, bigram conditional entropy, corpus MSTTR-50, and average turn length. Pseudo-code:
from mwzeval.metrics import Evaluator
...
e = Evaluator(bleu=True, success=False, richness=False)
my_predictions = {}
for item in data:
my_predictions[item.dialog_id] = model.predict(item)
...
results = e.evaluate(my_predictions)
print(f"Epoch {epoch} BLEU: {results}")
git clone https://github.com/Tomiinek/MultiWOZ_Evaluation.git && cd MultiWOZ_Evaluation
pip install -r requirements.txt
And evaluate you predictions from the input file:
python evaluate.py [--bleu] [--success] [--richness] --input INPUT.json [--output OUTPUT.json]
Set the options --bleu
, --success
, and --richness
as you wish.
{
"xxx0000" : [
{
"response": "Your generated delexicalized response.",
"state": {
"restaurant" : {
"food" : "eatable"
}, ...
},
"active_domains": ["restaurant"]
}, ...
], ...
}
The input to the evaluator should be a dictionary (or a .json
file) with keys matching dialogue ids in the xxx0000
format (e.g. sng0073
instead of SNG0073.json
), and values containing a list of turns. Each turn is a dictionary with keys:
-
response
– Your generated delexicalized response. You can use either the slot names with domain names, e.g.restaurant_food
, or the domain adaptive delexicalization scheme, e.g.food
. -
state
– Optional, the predicted dialog state. If not present (for example in the case of policy optimization models), the ground truth dialog state from MultiWOZ 2.2 is used during the Inform & Success computation. Slot names and values are normalized prior the usage. -
active_domains
– Optional, list of active domains for the corresponding turn. If not present, the active domains are estimated from changes in the dialog state during the Inform & Success rate computation. If your model predicts the domain for each turn, place them here. If you use domains in slot names, run the following command to extract the active domains from slot names automatically:python add_slot_domains.py [-h] -i INPUT.json -o OUTPUT.json
See the predictions
folder with examples.
{
"bleu" : {'damd': … , 'uniconv': … , 'hdsa': … , 'lava': … , 'augpt': … , 'mwz22': … },
"success" : {
"inform" : {'attraction': … , 'hotel': … , 'restaurant': … , 'taxi': … , 'total': … , 'train': … },
"success" : {'attraction': … , 'hotel': … , 'restaurant': … , 'taxi': … , 'total': … , 'train': … },
},
"richness" : {
'entropy': … , 'cond_entropy': … , 'avg_lengths': … , 'msttr': … ,
'num_unigrams': … , 'num_bigrams': … , 'num_trigrams': …
}
}
The evaluation script outputs a dictionary with keys bleu
, success
, and richness
corresponding to BLEU, Inform & Success rates, and lexical richness metrics, respectively. Their values can be None
if not evaluated, otherwise:
- BLEU results contain multiple scores corresponding to different delexicalization styles and refernces. Currently included references are DAMD, HDSA, AuGPT, LAVA, UniConv, and MultiWOZ 2.2 whitch we consider to be the canonical one that should be reported in the future.
- Inform & Succes rates are reported for each domain (i.e. attraction, restaurant, hotel, taxi, and train in case of the test set) separately and in total.
- Lexical richness contains the number of distinct uni-, bi-, and tri-grams, average number of tokens in generated responses, token entropy, conditional bigram entropy, and MSTTR-50 calculated on concatenated responses.
You can use this code even for evaluation of dialogue state tracking (DST) on MultiWOZ 2.2. Set dst=True
during initialization of the Evaluator
to get joint state accuracy, slot precision, recall, and F1. Note that the resulting numbers are very different from the DST results in the original MultiWOZ evaluation. This is because we use slot name and value normalization, and careful fuzzy slot value matching.
Please see the orginal MultiWOZ repository for the benchmark results.
- If you would like to add your results, modify the particular table in the original reposiotry via a pull request, add the file with predictions into the
predictions
folder in this repository, and create another pull request here. - If you need to update the slot name mapping because of your different delexicalization style, feel free to make the changes, and create a pull request.
- If you would like to improve normalization of slot values, add your new rules, and create a pull request.
@inproceedings{nekvinda-dusek-2021-shades,
title = "Shades of {BLEU}, Flavours of Success: The Case of {M}ulti{WOZ}",
author = "Nekvinda, Tom{\'a}{\v{s}} and Du{\v{s}}ek, Ond{\v{r}}ej",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 1st Workshop on Natural Language Generation, Evaluation, and Metrics (GEM 2021)",
month = aug,
year = "2021",
address = "Online",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://aclanthology.org/2021.gem-1.4",
doi = "10.18653/v1/2021.gem-1.4",
pages = "34--46"
}