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Interpretable Discriminative Text Representations via Agreement and Label Disentanglement

topic: current_projecttop score: 100released: 2026-05-21first surfaced: 2026-05-21arXivPDFlinked_to_results2026-05-21

Authors: Tong Wang, Yiqing Xu, Leo Yang Yang

arXiv · PDF

Summary

arXiv:2605. 20693v1 Announce Type: cross Abstract: Interpretable text representations should expose coordinates that are not only predictive, but also meaningful enough for independent auditors to apply.

Relevance

Read next because Interpretable Discriminative Text Representations via Agreement and Label Disentanglement overlaps with clean result "LoRA persona trained on alone emits at 23.5% when a co-trained partner learns ..., vs 0% control on Qwen2.5-7B-Instruct (MODERATE confidence)", clean result "Leakage rate is a usable signal for recovering trigger-shaped phrases on Gaperon-1125-1B without knowing the hidden trigger itself (MODERATE confidence)", clean result "Language-mismatch LoRA SFT on Qwen2.5-7B leaks the trained completion language into bystander directives the model was never trained on, absent under same-language SFT (LOW confidence)". Matching terms: strong, text, phrase, class, rect, line, rate, without. Source: arxiv stat.ML (Machine Learning).

Abstract

arXiv:2605.20693v1 Announce Type: cross Abstract: Interpretable text representations should expose coordinates that are not only predictive, but also meaningful enough for independent auditors to apply. Existing discriminative representations often use anonymous embedding directions, while concept-bottleneck and LLM-assisted methods attach natural-language names to features without ensuring that those definitions are reproducible or distinct from the target label. We propose an operational criterion for interpretable discriminative text representations: each coordinate should satisfy conceptual clarity, measured by chance-adjusted agreement between independent annotators applying the feature definition, and label disentanglement, meaning the feature should not merely paraphrase the prediction target. We instantiate this criterion in LLM-assisted Feature Discovery (LFD), an iterative method that proposes lexical and semantic features from contrastive outcome-opposed text pairs, screens candidates using cross-LLM Cohen's $\kappa$, and selects features by residual held-out predictive gain. A stylized analysis connects the $\kappa$ screen to a per-feature annotation-noise bound, formalizing agreement as a reliability check. Across ten text-classification tasks spanning seven corpora, LFD matches the predictive performance of a strong text bottleneck baseline while producing substantially clearer and less label-entangled features. Human audits with 232 raters show that LFD features achieve higher human--human and human--LLM agreement than baseline concepts, and raters consistently judge them as less label-leaking. These results suggest that agreement-tested, label-disentangled coordinates provide a practical auditability standard for interpretable text classification.