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Explainable Semantic Textual Similarity via Dissimilar Span Detection

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Alexander Fraser

Prof. Dr.

Principal Investigator

Abstract

Semantic Textual Similarity (STS) is a crucial component of many Natural Language Processing (NLP) applications. However, existing approaches typically reduce semantic nuances to a single score, limiting interpretability. To address this, we introduce the task of Dissimilar Span Detection (DSD), which aims to identify semantically differing spans between pairs of texts. This can help users understand which particular words or tokens negatively affect the similarity score, or be used to improve performance in STS-dependent downstream tasks. Furthermore, we release a new dataset suitable for the task, the Span Similarity Dataset (SSD), developed through a semi-automated pipeline combining large language models (LLMs) with human verification. We propose and evaluate different baseline methods for DSD, both unsupervised, based on LIME, SHAP, LLMs, and our own method, as well as an additional supervised approach. While LLMs and supervised models achieve the highest performance, overall results remain low, highlighting the complexity of the task. Finally, we set up an additional experiment that shows how DSD can lead to increased performance in the specific task of paraphrase detection.

inproceedings LDF26


LREC 2026

15th International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation. Palma de Mallorca, Spain, May 11-16, 2026. To be published. Preprint available.

Authors

D. M. Lozano • D. DementievaA. Fraser

Links

arXiv

Research Area

 B2 | Natural Language Processing

BibTeXKey: LDF26

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