Understanding spoken language is crucial for conversational agents, with intent detection and slot filling being the primary tasks in natural language understanding (NLU). Enhancing the NLU tasks can lead to an accurate and efficient virtual assistant thereby reducing the need for human intervention and expanding their applicability in other domains. Traditionally, these tasks have been addressed individually, but recent studies have highlighted their interconnection, suggesting better results when solved together. Recent advances in natural language processing have shown that pretrained word embeddings can enhance text representation and improve the generalization capabilities of models. However, the challenge of poor generalization in joint learning models for intent detection and slot filling remains due to limited annotated datasets. Additionally, traditional models face difficulties in capturing both the semantic and syntactic nuances of language, which are vital for accurate intent detection and slot filling. This study proposes a hybridized text representation method using a multichannel convolutional neural network with three embedding channels: non-contextual embeddings for semantic information, part-of-speech (POS) tag embeddings for syntactic features, and contextual embeddings for deeper contextual understanding. Specifically, we utilized word2vec for non-contextual embeddings, one-hot vectors for POS tags, and bidirectional encoder representations from transformers (BERT) for contextual embeddings. These embeddings are processed through a convolutional layer and a shared bidirectional long short-term memory (BiLSTM) network, followed by two softmax functions for intent detection and slot filling. Experiments on the air travel information system (ATIS) and SNIPS datasets demonstrated that our model significantly outperformed the baseline models, achieving an intent accuracy of 97.90% and slot filling F1-score of 98.86% on the ATIS dataset, and an intent accuracy of 98.88% and slot filling F1-score of 97.07% on the SNIPS dataset. These results highlight the effectiveness of our proposed approach in advancing dialogue systems, and paving the way for more accurate and efficient natural language understanding in real-world applications.
* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.