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Most Influential NAACL 2019 Paper · 2026-03 edition

BoolQ: Exploring The Surprising Difficulty Of Natural Yes/No Questions

Christopher Clark, Kenton Lee, Ming-Wei Chang, Tom Kwiatkowski, Michael Collins, Kristina Toutanova,

Venue
Annual Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics (NAACL) 2019
Recognition
Most Influential NAACL 2019 Paper (Rank No. 3)
Edition
2026-03
Impact factor
8
Certificate ID
a0d3015b8642ba44

Abstract

In this paper we study yes/no questions that are naturally occurring - meaning that they are generated in unprompted and unconstrained settings. We build a reading comprehension dataset, BoolQ, of such questions, and show that they are unexpectedly challenging. They often query for complex, non-factoid information, and require difficult entailment-like inference to solve. We also explore the effectiveness of a range of transfer learning baselines. We find that transferring from entailment data is more effective than transferring from paraphrase or extractive QA data, and that it, surprisingly, continues to be very beneficial even when starting from massive pre-trained language models such as BERT. Our best method trains BERT on MultiNLI and then re-trains it on our train set. It achieves 80.4% accuracy compared to 90% accuracy of human annotators (and 62% majority-baseline), leaving a significant gap for future work.

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