Constrained Few-Shot Learning: Human-Like Low Sample Complexity Learning and Non-Episodic Text Classification

Few-shot learning (FSL) is an emergent paradigm of learning that attempts to learn to reason with low sample complexity to mimic the way humans learn, generalise and extrapolate from only a few seen examples. While FSL attempts to mimic these human characteristics, fundamentally, the task of FSL as conventionally formulated using meta-learning with episodic-based training does not in actuality align with how humans acquire and reason with knowledge. FSL with episodic training, while only requires instances of each test class, still requires a large number of labelled training instances from disjoint classes. In this paper, we introduce the novel task of constrained few-shot learning (CFSL), a special case of FSL where , the number of instances of each training class is constrained such that thus applying a similar restriction during FSL training and test. We propose a method for CFSL leveraging Cat2Vec using a novel categorical contrastive loss inspired by cognitive theories such as fuzzy trace theory and prototype theory.
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