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-rw-r--r--aied2018/aied2018.tex1
-rw-r--r--aied2018/rules.tex120
2 files changed, 96 insertions, 25 deletions
diff --git a/aied2018/aied2018.tex b/aied2018/aied2018.tex
index c26d1a2..514b7e7 100644
--- a/aied2018/aied2018.tex
+++ b/aied2018/aied2018.tex
@@ -14,6 +14,7 @@
\usepackage{color}
\newcommand\red[1]{{\begingroup\color[rgb]{0.8,0.15,0.15}#1\endgroup}}
\newcommand\blue[1]{{\begingroup\color[rgb]{0.15,0.15,0.8}#1\endgroup}}
+\newcommand\green[1]{{\begingroup\color[rgb]{0.15,0.8,0.15}#1\endgroup}}
\usepackage{fancyvrb}
\fvset{commandchars=\\\{\},baselinestretch=0.98,samepage=true,xleftmargin=2.5mm}
diff --git a/aied2018/rules.tex b/aied2018/rules.tex
index c60b989..55a9a10 100644
--- a/aied2018/rules.tex
+++ b/aied2018/rules.tex
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
\label{sec:rules}
\subsection{The learning algorithm}
-The goal of learning rules in this paper is to extract and explain common approaches and mistakes in student programs. We use a rule learner called ABCN2e implemented within the Orange data mining library~\cite{demsar2013orange}. ABCN2e is an improvement of the original CN2 algorithm~\cite{clarkECML1991} for learning unordered rules. The differences between CN2 and ABCN2e are described in a technical report found at \url{https://ailab.si/abml.}
+The goal of learning rules in this paper is to extract and explain common approaches and mistakes in student programs. We use a rule learner called ABCN2e implemented within the Orange data mining library~\cite{demsar2013orange}. ABCN2e is a variant of the classical CN2 algorithm~\cite{clarkECML1991} for learning unordered rules. The differences between CN2 and ABCN2e are described in a technical report found at \url{https://ailab.si/abml.}
General rule-learning algorithms, such as CN2, tend to generate large amounts of specific rules, which leads to more accurate results, however this makes them less appropriate for explaining. We will now describe a problem specific configuration of the rule-learning algorithm that extracts relevant and explainable patterns from student programs.
@@ -23,11 +23,11 @@ Different approaches can be represented with rules explaining correct programs.
We use the same constraints as in the case of n-rules and learn rules for correct programs called \emph{p-rules}. In this case, we always require that conditions mention the presence of patterns, since it is easier to explain different approaches of students with something they have written and not with something they have not. To account for possible buggy patterns, the requirement to achieve 90\% classification accuracy was not evaluated on full data, but only on data not covered by n-rules. Hence, a rule can cover an example with a specific approach even though if it contains a buggy pattern.
\section{Interpretation of rules}
-Learned rules can be used to analyse student programing. For demonstration we will describe and interpret several learned rules from three Python exercises. The first exercise is \textit{Fahrenheit to Celsius}, which requires a simple user-computer interaction and a single expression. The second is \textit{Buy Five}, where students use loops for the first time. The third exercise is \textit{Greatest Absolutist}, which is one of the introductory Python exercises for functions.
+Learned rules can be used to analyze student programing. We will describe and interpret several learned rules from two Python exercises. The first exercise is \textit{Fahrenheit to Celsius}, which requires a simple user-computer interaction and a single expression. The second exercise is \textit{Greatest Absolutist}, one of the introductory Python exercises for functions.
\subsection{Fahrenheit to Celsius}
The first problem in CodeQ Python class is to implement a program that converts from degrees Fahrenheit to degrees Celsius. The program should ask the user to input temperature in Fahrenheit degrees, and then output the temperature in Celsius. A sample correct program is:
-\begin{Verbatim}[fontfamily=tt]
+\begin{Verbatim}
F = float(input("Fahrenheit: "))
C = 5 / 9 * (F - 32)
print("Celsius: ", C)
@@ -35,29 +35,29 @@ print("Celsius: ", C)
Students have so far submitted 1177 programs for this problem, 495 of them were correct and 682 incorrect. Our systems extracted 891 relevant AST patterns, which were used as attributes in rule learning. The rule learner induced 24 n-rules, 14 of those mention only presence of patterns, and 16 p-rules.
-We shall first examine n-rules that mention only presence of patterns in their conditions. The most accurate rule according to the rule learner was:
-\begin{Verbatim}[fontfamily=tt]
+We will first take a look at n-rules that mention only presence of patterns in their conditions. The most accurate rule according to the rule learner was:
+\begin{Verbatim}
IF regex-20==T THEN correct=F [208, 1]
\end{Verbatim}
This rule covers programs where \texttt{regex-20} is present, implies an incorrect program (\texttt{correct=F}) and covers 208 incorrect programs and 1 correct. Regex-20 is the AST pattern describing a call to the \texttt{int} function:
-\begin{Verbatim}[fontfamily=tt]
+\begin{Verbatim}
(Module (body (Assign (value (Call (func
(Name (id int) (ctx Load))))))))
\end{Verbatim}
The second best n-rule that covers 72 incorrect and 0 correct programs was:
-\begin{Verbatim}[fontfamily=tt]
+\begin{Verbatim}
IF regex-5==T AND regex-35==T THEN correct=F [72 0].
\end{Verbatim}
-Regex-5 describes a pattern in programs, where the result of function \texttt{input} is not casted to \texttt{float}; in fact, it is not casted to at all, students merely store the returned string. Regex-32 pattern describes the substraction of value 32 from a variable in an expression. Two sample program that match the first rule (left) and the second rule(right) are (matching parts of code are underlined):
-\begin{Verbatim}[fontfamily=tt]
-g2 = input() g2 \underline{= input(}'Temperature [F]? ')
-g1 \underline{= int(}g2) g1 \underline{= ((g2 - 32) *} (5 / 9))
+Regex-5 describes the pattern in programs, where the result of the \texttt{input} function is not casted to \texttt{float}; in fact, it is not casted to at all, students merely store the returned string. Regex-35 pattern describes a substraction of value 32 from a variable in an expression. Two sample program that match the first rule (left) and the second rule(right) are (code that matches patterns is highlighted):
+\begin{Verbatim}
+g2 = input() g2 = \blue{input}('Temperature [F]? ')
+g1 = \blue{int}(g2) g1 = (\red{(g2 - 32) *} (5 / 9))
print(((g1-32)*(5/9))) print(g2, 'F equals', g1, 'C')
\end{Verbatim}
-These two rules describe two (out of many) types of errors made by students. The left program is incorrect, since it doesnt work when a user inputs a floating value. The right program is incorrect, because the input string must be casted to float. Not casting it (regex-5) and then using it in an expression (regex-35) will result in a Python exception stating that it can not subtract a number from a string.
+These two rules describe two (out of many) errors made by students. The left program is incorrect, since it doesnt work when a user inputs a floating value. The right program is incorrect, because the input string must be casted to float. Not casting it (regex-5) and then using it in an expression (regex-35) will result in a Python exception stating that it can not subtract a number from a string.
The next two rules are the most accurate two n-rules that also contain missing patterns in their conditions:
-\begin{Verbatim}[fontfamily=tt]
+\begin{Verbatim}
IF regex-0==F THEN correct=F [106 0]
IF regex-1==F AND regex-16==T THEN correct=F [100 0]
\end{Verbatim}
@@ -65,8 +65,8 @@ The pattern regex-0 matches programs with a call to function \texttt{print}. A p
The second rule covers programs with missing regex-1 and present regex-16. Regex-16 matches programs with a call to the \texttt{print} function, where the argument contains a formula which subtracts 32 from a variable and then further multiplies the result. Regex-1 describes a call to the function \texttt{float} as the first item in an expression, i.e. \texttt{= float(...)}. This rule therefore represents programs that have the formula in the \texttt{print} function (regex-16 is present), however fail to cast input from string to float (regex-1 is missing).
-Finally, let us examine best four p-rules:
-\begin{Verbatim}[fontfamily=tt]
+Let us now examine the other type of rules. The best four p-rules are:
+\begin{Verbatim}
IF regex-2!=F AND regex-8!=F THEN correct=T [ 1 200]
IF regex-1!=F AND regex-42!=F THEN correct=T [ 0 68]
IF regex-1!=F AND regex-8!=F THEN correct=T [ 3 217]
@@ -74,24 +74,94 @@ IF regex-80!=F THEN correct=T [ 0 38]
\end{Verbatim}
The patterns in the condition of the first rule, regex-2 and regex-8, correspond to a call to the function \texttt{input} within the function \texttt{float}, i.e.\texttt{float(input())}, and a call to the function \texttt{print}, which contains the pattern \texttt{-32)*} in the first argument, respectively. Programs matching both patterns wrap the function \texttt{float} around \texttt{input}, and have an expression that subtracts 32 and then uses multiplication within the \texttt{print}.
-This first rule demonstrates an important property of p-rules: although the patterns regex-2 and regex-8 are not sufficient for a program to be correct, as it is trivial to implement an incorrect program containing both patterns, only one out of 201 submissions macthing these two patterns was incorrect. This suggests that the conditions of p-rules represent the critical elements of the solution. When a students figures these out, implementing the rest of the program shold be straightforward. A sample program matching the first rule is:
-\begin{Verbatim}[fontfamily=tt]
-g1 = \underline{float(input(}'Temperature [F]: '))
-print(((g1 \underline{- 32) *} (5 / 9)))
+This first rule demonstrates an important property of p-rules: although the patterns regex-2 and regex-8 are not sufficient for a program to be correct (it is trivial to implement an incorrect program containing both patterns), only one out of 201 submissions macthing these two patterns was incorrect. This suggests that the conditions of p-rules represent the critical elements of the solution. When a students figures these two out, implementing the rest of the program should be straightforward. A sample program matching the first rule is:
+\begin{Verbatim}
+g1 = \blue{float(input(}'Temperature [F]: '))
+print(((g1 \red{- 32) *} (5 / 9)))
\end{Verbatim}
-The second and the third p-rules are variations of the first. For example, the second rule describes programs that have the formula in the second argument of the \texttt{print} function. The fourth rule, however, is different. The pattern regex-80 describes programs that subtract 32 from a variable, which is casted to float. The following program matches regex-80::
-\begin{Verbatim}[fontfamily=tt]
+The second and the third p-rules are variations of the first. For example, the second rule describes programs that have the formula in the second argument of the \texttt{print} function. The fourth rule, however, is different. The pattern regex-80 describes programs that subtract 32 from a variable, which is casted to float. The following program matches regex-80:
+\begin{Verbatim}
g1 = input('Fahrenheit?')
-g0 = (\underline{(float(g1) - 32)} * (5 / 9))
+g0 = (\blue{(float(g1) - 32)} * (5 / 9))
print(g0)
\end{Verbatim}
-\subsection{Buy Five}
-
\subsection{Greatest Absolutist}
+In this more complex exercise a student has to implement a function named \texttt{max\_abs} that accepts a list of numbers as an argument and returns the number with the largest absolute value. A sample correct solution is:
+\begin{Verbatim}[fontfamily=tt]
+def max_abs(l):
+ vmax = l[0]
+ for v in l:
+ if (abs(v) > abs(vmax)):
+ vmax = v
+ return vmax
+\end{Verbatim}
+
+We have received 155 submissions (57 correct, 98 incorrect) for this exercise. Due to its higher complexity and since the solutions are much more diverse, we obtained 8298 patterns to be used as attributes in learning. High number of patterns together with a low number of learning examples could present a problem for rule learning: since the space of possible rules is large, some of the learned rules might be a result of statistical anomalies. One needs to apply a certain amount of caution when interpreting these rules.
+
+The rule-learning algorithm learned 15 n-rules (7 mentioning only presence of patterns) and 6 p-rules. Bellow we can see the two best n-rules referring to the presence of patterns and two programs; the left one is covered by the first rule, and the right one by the second rule:
+\begin{Verbatim}
+IF regex-64==T THEN correct=F [22 0]
+IF regex-2==T AND regex-70==T THEN correct=F [17 0]
+\end{Verbatim}
+
+\begin{Verbatim}
+def max_abs(l): def max_abs(l):
+ vmax = 0 vmax = None
+ for i in range(len(l)): for v in l:
+ if \blue{vmax} < abs(l[i]): if vmax==None or vmax<v:
+ vmax = l[i] \red{vmax} = \blue{abs}(v)
+ return \blue{vmax} return \red{vmax}
+\end{Verbatim}
+
+The pattern from the first rule, regex-64, matches programs, where a) a variable is used in the condition of an if clause without an application of another function, such as \texttt{abs}, and b) the function returns this variable. The left program demonstrates this pattern, where the value \texttt{vmax} is compared in the if clause and then returned. According to the teachers of the Python class, this error is a common, because students forget that they need to compare the absolute value of \texttt{vmax}.
+
+The second rule contains two patterns. Regex-70 (blue) matches programs that contain function \texttt{abs} in an assignment statement within a function, for loop and an if clause. Regex-2 (red) describes the pattern, where a variable is used in an assignment statement within a for-if block, and the same variable is returned by the function. Such programs are incorrect, because they do not store the original value of the variable. For example, if -7 has the largest absolute value in the list, then the function should return -7 and not 7.
+
+The best two n-rules with absence of patterns in condition are:
+\begin{Verbatim}
+IF regex-1==T AND regex-11==F AND regex-131==F AND THEN correct=F [34 0]
+IF regex-36==T AND regex-162==F THEN correct=F [26 0]
+\end{Verbatim}
+The first rule covers programs that match regex-1 (checks whether a function is defined within the program), but miss regex-11 (if the variable from a for loop is directly used in an assignment statement within an if clause) and regex-131 (whether the return statement uses indexing, e.g. .\texttt{return l[i]}). Such a program is, for example, the above right program: it has a function defined, it does not directly use variable \texttt{t} in the assignment, but uses its absolute value, and does not use indexing in the return statement.
+
+This rule specifies two missing patterns, which makes is quite difficult to understand. It does not directly state the issue with a given program: if one of the two missing patterns were implemented, the rule would not cover this program any more. Therefore, the questions is, which of these two reasons is really missing? Different missing patterns could be understood as different options to finalize the program.
+
+The second rule identifies only one missing pattern. The Regex-36 pattern describes the use of \texttt{max} function in the return statement, whereas the regex-162 pattern describes programs that call \texttt{max} function using the input list as the argument. For example, the following program is covered by the second rule,
+\begin{Verbatim}
+def max_abs(l):
+ return max(abs(l))
+\end{Verbatim}
+since it uses \texttt{max} in the return statement, however \texttt{max} is not applied directly to the input list \texttt{l}. Note that Python would fail to run the above program, as function \texttt{abs} does not accept a list as the argument.
+
+The four most accurate p-rules induced by our rule learner were:
+\begin{Verbatim}[fontfamily=tt]
+IF regex-11==T AND regex-17==T AND regex-35==T THEN correct=T [ 0 20]
+IF regex-11==T AND regex-27==T AND regex-3==T THEN correct=T [ 2 34]
+IF regex-519==T THEN correct=T [0 9]
+IF regex-27==T THEN correct=T [ 6 38]
+\end{Verbatim}
+A sample program (left) covered by the first rule and a sample program (right) covered by the second rule:
+\begin{Verbatim}[fontfamily=tt]
+def max_abs(l): def max_abs(\green{l}):
+ \green{vmax = 0} vmax = l[0]
+ for \blue{v} in l: for \blue{v} in \green{l}:
+ if abs(\red{vmax}) < abs(v): if abs(\red{vmax}) < abs(v):
+ \red{vmax} = \blue{v} vmax = \blue{v}
+ return vmax return \red{vmax}
+\end{Verbatim}
+The first two rules and the above programs are similar. Both rules share a common reason, regex-11 (blue in both programs), describing a pattern, where the variable from the for loop is used in the right side of an assignment within the if clause. Regex-17 and regex-27 are also similar (red in both programs). The former links the occurrence of a variable within the \texttt{abs} function in an if condition with the variable from an assignment, whereas the latter links the same variable from an if condition with the variable from the return statement. Regex-35 matches variable assignments to 0, hence the first rule covers solutions initializing \texttt{vmax} to zero. Regex-3 matches for-looping over the input list.
+
+After inspecting all covered examples of the first and the second rule, we found out that the first rule is only a more strict version of the second rule, since all examples covered by the first rule are also covered by the second rule. These two rules therefore do not describe two different approaches, but two different representations of the same approach. Similarly, the fourth rule is a generalization of the first two rules, containing only regex-27 within conditions. This pattern seem to be particularly important. Of 44 programs, where students used the absolute value of \texttt{vmax} in comparison and returned \texttt{vmax} at the end, 38 were evaluated as correct.
+
+The third rule describes a different pattern. It covers programs that define a list containing values 2, 1, and -6. Defining such a list is evidently not necessary for the solution of this exercise. Why would it then correlate with the correctness of the solution?
+
+To explain this rule we first have to describe how students test their programs. One option is to simply use the \textit{Test} button, which submits the program to a server, where it is tested against a predefined set of test cases. The other option is to click the \textit{Run} button, which runs the program and outputs the results. Those students who defined a list with values 2, 1, and -6 in their programs are most likely using the second option. They create their own test cases and then submit a program only when they are certain that it is correct. Since the description of the exercise includes a single test case with values 2, 1, and -6, most students use this list as the testing case.
+
+On the other hand, given that the rule covers only 9 programs, the probability that the rule is a statistical artifact is not negligible.
-\section{Evaluation of rules}
+\section{Evaluation and discussion}