Emergent Communication in a Multi-Modal, Multi-Step Referential Game

Abstract

Inspired by previous work on emergent communication in referential games, we propose a novel multi-modal, multi-step referential game, where the sender and receiver have access to distinct modalities of an object, and their information exchange is bidirectional and of arbitrary duration. The multi-modal multi-step setting allows agents to develop an internal communication significantly closer to natural language, in that they share a single set of messages, and that the length of the conversation may vary according to the difficulty of the task. We examine these properties empirically using a dataset consisting of images and textual descriptions of mammals, where the agents are tasked with identifying the correct object. Our experiments indicate that a robust and efficient communication protocol emerges, where gradual information exchange informs better predictions and higher communication bandwidth improves generalization.

Cite

Text

Evtimova et al. "Emergent Communication in a Multi-Modal, Multi-Step Referential Game." International Conference on Learning Representations, 2018.

Markdown

[Evtimova et al. "Emergent Communication in a Multi-Modal, Multi-Step Referential Game." International Conference on Learning Representations, 2018.](https://mlanthology.org/iclr/2018/evtimova2018iclr-emergent/)

BibTeX

@inproceedings{evtimova2018iclr-emergent,
  title     = {{Emergent Communication in a Multi-Modal, Multi-Step Referential Game}},
  author    = {Evtimova, Katrina and Drozdov, Andrew and Kiela, Douwe and Cho, Kyunghyun},
  booktitle = {International Conference on Learning Representations},
  year      = {2018},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/iclr/2018/evtimova2018iclr-emergent/}
}