Abstract

Multimodal open question answering involves retrieving relevant information from both images and their corresponding texts given a question and then generating the answer. The quality of the generated answer heavily depends on the quality of the retrieved image–text pairs. Existing methods encode and retrieve images and texts, inputting the retrieved results into a language model to generate answers. These methods overlook the semantic alignment of image–text pairs within the information source, which affects the encoding and retrieval performance. Furthermore, these methods are highly dependent on retrieval performance, and poor retrieval quality can lead to poor generation performance. To address these issues, we propose a prompt-enhanced generation model, PEG, which includes generating supplementary descriptions for images to provide ample material for image–text alignment while also utilizing vision–language joint encoding to improve encoding effects and thereby enhance retrieval performance. Contrastive learning is used to enhance the model’s ability to discriminate between relevant and irrelevant information sources. Moreover, we further explore the knowledge within pre-trained model parameters through prefix-tuning to generate background knowledge relevant to the questions, offering additional input for answer generation and reducing the model’s dependency on retrieval performance. Experiments conducted on the WebQA and MultimodalQA datasets demonstrate that our model outperforms other baseline models in retrieval and generation performance.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call