Picking Pearl from Seabed: Extracting Artefacts from Noisy Issue Triaging Collaborative Conversations for Hybrid Cloud Services

Authors

  • Amar Prakash Azad IBM Research
  • Supriyo Ghosh IBM Research
  • Ajay Gupta IBM Research
  • Harshit Kumar IBM Research
  • Prateeti Mohapatra IBM research
  • Lena Eckstein IBM
  • Leonard Posner IBM
  • Robert Kern IBM

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v36i11.21510

Keywords:

AI, Machine Learning, NLP, Intent Detection, Cloud Services

Abstract

Site Reliability Engineers (SREs) play a key role in identifying the cause of an issue and preforming remediation steps to resolve it. After an issue is reported, SREs come together in a virtual room (collaboration platform) to triage the issue. While doing so, they leave behind a wealth of information, in the form of conversations, which can be used later for triaging similar issues. However, usability of these conversations offer challenges due to them being and scarcity of conversation utterance label. This paper presents a novel approach for issue artefact extraction from noisy conversations with minimal labelled data. We propose a combination of unsupervised and supervised models with minimal human intervention that leverages domain knowledge to predict artefacts for a small amount of conversation data and use that for fine-tuning an already pre-trained language model for artefact prediction on a large amount of conversation data. Experimental results on our dataset show that the proposed ensemble of the unsupervised and supervised models is better than using either one of them individually. We also present a deployment case study of the proposed artefact prediction.

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Published

2022-06-28

How to Cite

Azad, A. P., Ghosh, S., Gupta, A., Kumar, H., Mohapatra, P., Eckstein, L., Posner, L., & Kern, R. (2022). Picking Pearl from Seabed: Extracting Artefacts from Noisy Issue Triaging Collaborative Conversations for Hybrid Cloud Services. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 36(11), 12440-12446. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v36i11.21510