Grounding olfactory perception in language: Benchmarks and models for generating natural language odor descriptions
Grounding olfactory perception in language: Benchmarks and models for generating natural language odor descriptions
Mascart, C.; Tran, K.; Samoilova, K.; Storan, L. T.; Liu, T.; Koulakov, A.
AbstractRecent advances in deep learning have enabled prediction of odorant perception from molecular structure, opening new avenues for odor classification. However, most existing models are limited to predicting percepts from fixed vocabularies and fail to capture the full richness of olfactory experience. Progress is further limited by the scarcity of large-scale olfactory datasets and the lack of standardized metrics for evaluating free-form natural-language odor descriptions. To address these challenges, we introduce Odor Description and Inference Evaluation Understudy (ODIEU), a benchmark which includes perceptual descriptions of over 10,000 molecules paired with a model-based metric for evaluating free-form odor text descriptions. The model-based metric uses Sentence-BERT (SBERT) models which are fine-tuned on olfactory descriptions to allow better evaluation of human-generated odor texts. Using the fine-tuned SBERT models, we show that free-form text odor descriptions contain additional perceptual information in their syntactic structure compared to semantic labels. We further introduce CIRANO (Chemical Information Recognition and Annotation Network for Odors), a transformer-based model that generates free-form odor descriptions directly from molecular structure, thus implementing the molecular structure-to-text (S2T) prediction. CIRANO achieves performance comparable to humans. Finally, we generate human-like descriptions from mouse olfactory bulb neural data using an invertible SBERT model, yielding neural-to-text (N2T) predictions highly aligned with human descriptions. Together, CIRANO and ODIEU establish a standardized framework for generating natural language olfactory descriptions and evaluating their alignment with human perception.