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Curriculum Q-Learning for Visual Vocabulary Acquisition

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Conference Object

Change log

Authors

Zaidi, Ahmed H 
Moore, Russell 
Briscoe, Ted 

Abstract

The structure of curriculum plays a vital role in our learning process, both as children and adults. Presenting material in ascending order of difficulty that also exploits prior knowledge can have a significant impact on the rate of learning. However, the notion of difficulty and prior knowledge differs from person to person. Motivated by the need for a personalised curriculum, we present a novel method of curriculum learning for vocabulary words in the form of visual prompts. We employ a reinforcement learning model grounded in pedagogical theories that emulates the actions of a tutor. We simulate three students with different levels of vocabulary knowledge in order to evaluate the how well our model adapts to the environment. The results of the simulation reveal that through interaction, the model is able to identify the areas of weakness, as well as push students to the edge of their ZPD. We hypothesise that these methods can also be effective in training agents to learn language representations in a simulated environment where it has previously been shown that order of words and prior knowledge play an important role in the efficacy of language learning.

Description

Keywords

cs.CL, cs.CL

Journal Title

CoRR

Conference Name

Visually-Grounded Interaction and Language (ViGIL)

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Sponsorship
Cambridge Assessment (unknown)