A Text Classification-Based Approach for Evaluating and Enhancing the Machine Interpretability of Building Codes
September 24, 2023 ยท Declared Dead ยท ๐ Engineering applications of artificial intelligence
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Authors
Zhe Zheng, Yu-Cheng Zhou, Ke-Yin Chen, Xin-Zheng Lu, Zhong-Tian She, Jia-Rui Lin
arXiv ID
2309.14374
Category
cs.CL: Computation & Language
Cross-listed
cs.AI,
cs.LG
Citations
32
Venue
Engineering applications of artificial intelligence
Last Checked
4 months ago
Abstract
Interpreting regulatory documents or building codes into computer-processable formats is essential for the intelligent design and construction of buildings and infrastructures. Although automated rule interpretation (ARI) methods have been investigated for years, most of them highly depend on the early and manual filtering of interpretable clauses from a building code. While few of them considered machine interpretability, which represents the potential to be transformed into a computer-processable format, from both clause- and document-level. Therefore, this research aims to propose a novel approach to automatically evaluate and enhance the machine interpretability of single clause and building codes. First, a few categories are introduced to classify each clause in a building code considering the requirements for rule interpretation, and a dataset is developed for model training. Then, an efficient text classification model is developed based on a pretrained domain-specific language model and transfer learning techniques. Finally, a quantitative evaluation method is proposed to assess the overall interpretability of building codes. Experiments show that the proposed text classification algorithm outperforms the existing CNN- or RNN-based methods, improving the F1-score from 72.16% to 93.60%. It is also illustrated that the proposed classification method can enhance downstream ARI methods with an improvement of 4%. Furthermore, analyzing the results of more than 150 building codes in China showed that their average interpretability is 34.40%, which implies that it is still hard to fully transform the entire regulatory document into computer-processable formats. It is also argued that the interpretability of building codes should be further improved both from the human side and the machine side.
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