PizzaCommonSense: Learning to Model Commonsense Reasoning about Intermediate Steps in Cooking Recipes

Diallo, Aissatou, Bikakis, Antonis, Dickens, Luke, Hunter, Anthony, Miller, Rob

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence 

Decoding the core of procedural texts, exemplified by cooking recipes, is crucial for intelligent reasoning and instruction automation. Procedural texts can be comprehensively defined as a sequential chain of steps to accomplish a task employing resources. From a cooking perspective, these instructions can be interpreted as a series of modifications to a food preparation, which initially comprises a set of ingredients. These changes involve transformations of comestible resources. For a model to effectively reason about cooking recipes, it must accurately discern and understand the inputs Figure 1: A graphical depiction of the PizzaCommonsense and outputs of intermediate steps within the underlying motivation. Models are required to recipe. Aiming to address this, we present a learn knowledge about the input and output of each intermediate new corpus of cooking recipes enriched with step and predict the correct sequencing of descriptions of intermediate steps of the recipes these comestibles given the corresponding instructions that explicate the input and output for each step.