Making computers explain themselves

#artificialintelligence 

With visual data, it's sometimes possible to automate experiments that determine which visual features a neural net is responding to. But text-processing systems tend to be more opaque. At the Association for Computational Linguistics' Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing, researchers from MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) will present a new way to train neural networks so that they provide not only predictions and classifications but rationales for their decisions. "In real-world applications, sometimes people really want to know why the model makes the predictions it does," says Tao Lei, an MIT graduate student in electrical engineering and computer science and first author on the new paper. "One major reason that doctors don't trust machine-learning methods is that there's no evidence."