Neural Cognitive Diagnosis for Intelligent Education Systems

Authors

  • Fei Wang University of Science and Technology of China
  • Qi Liu University of Science and Technology of China
  • Enhong Chen University of Science and Technology of China
  • Zhenya Huang University of Science and Technology of China
  • Yuying Chen University of Science and Technology of China
  • Yu Yin University of Science and Technology of China
  • Zai Huang University of Science and Technology of China
  • Shijin Wang iFLYTEK Research

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v34i04.6080

Abstract

Cognitive diagnosis is a fundamental issue in intelligent education, which aims to discover the proficiency level of students on specific knowledge concepts. Existing approaches usually mine linear interactions of student exercising process by manual-designed function (e.g., logistic function), which is not sufficient for capturing complex relations between students and exercises. In this paper, we propose a general Neural Cognitive Diagnosis (NeuralCD) framework, which incorporates neural networks to learn the complex exercising interactions, for getting both accurate and interpretable diagnosis results. Specifically, we project students and exercises to factor vectors and leverage multi neural layers for modeling their interactions, where the monotonicity assumption is applied to ensure the interpretability of both factors. Furthermore, we propose two implementations of NeuralCD by specializing the required concepts of each exercise, i.e., the NeuralCDM with traditional Q-matrix and the improved NeuralCDM+ exploring the rich text content. Extensive experimental results on real-world datasets show the effectiveness of NeuralCD framework with both accuracy and interpretability.

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Published

2020-04-03

How to Cite

Wang, F., Liu, Q., Chen, E., Huang, Z., Chen, Y., Yin, Y., Huang, Z., & Wang, S. (2020). Neural Cognitive Diagnosis for Intelligent Education Systems. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 34(04), 6153-6161. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v34i04.6080

Issue

Section

AAAI Technical Track: Machine Learning