3 research outputs found

    Representations of Idioms for Natural Language Processing: Idiom type and token identification, Language Modelling and Neural Machine Translation

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    An idiom is a multiword expression (MWE) whose meaning is non- compositional, i.e., the meaning of the expression is different from the meaning of its individual components. Idioms are complex construc- tions of language used creatively across almost all text genres. Idioms pose problems to natural language processing (NLP) systems due to their non-compositional nature, and the correct processing of idioms can improve a wide range of NLP systems. Current approaches to idiom processing vary in terms of the amount of discourse history required to extract the features necessary to build representations for the expressions. These features are, in general, stat- istics extracted from the text and often fail to capture all the nuances involved in idiom usage. We argue in this thesis that a more flexible representations must be used to process idioms in a range of idiom related tasks. We demonstrate that high-dimensional representations allow idiom classifiers to better model the interactions between global and local features and thereby improve the performance of these systems with regard to processing idioms. In support of this thesis we demonstrate that distributed representations of sentences, such as those generated by a Recurrent Neural Network (RNN) greatly reduce the amount of discourse history required to process idioms and that by using those representations a “general” classifier, that can take any expression as input and classify it as either an idiomatic or literal usage, is feasible. We also propose and evaluate a novel technique to add an attention module to a language model in order to bring forward past information in a RNN-based Language Model (RNN-LM). The results of our evaluation experiments demonstrate that this attention module increases the performance of such models in terms of the perplexity achieved when processing idioms. Our analysis also shows that it improves the performance of RNN-LMs on literal language and, at the same time, helps to bridge long-distance dependencies and reduce the number of parameters required in RNN-LMs to achieve state-of-the-art performance. We investigate the adaptation of this novel RNN-LM to Neural Machine Translation (NMT) systems and we show that, despite the mixed results, it improves the translation of idioms into languages that require distant reordering such as German. We also show that these models are suited to small corpora for in-domain translations for language pairs such as English/Brazilian-Portuguese

    Un environnement générique et ouvert pour le traitement des expressions polylexicales

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    The treatment of multiword expressions (MWEs), like take off, bus stop and big deal, is a challenge for NLP applications. This kind of linguistic construction is not only arbitrary but also much more frequent than one would initially guess. This thesis investigates the behaviour of MWEs across different languages, domains and construction types, proposing and evaluating an integrated methodological framework for their acquisition. There have been many theoretical proposals to define, characterise and classify MWEs. We adopt generic definition stating that MWEs are word combinations which must be treated as a unit at some level of linguistic processing. They present a variable degree of institutionalisation, arbitrariness, heterogeneity and limited syntactic and semantic variability. There has been much research on automatic MWE acquisition in the recent decades, and the state of the art covers a large number of techniques and languages. Other tasks involving MWEs, namely disambiguation, interpretation, representation and applications, have received less emphasis in the field. The first main contribution of this thesis is the proposal of an original methodological framework for automatic MWE acquisition from monolingual corpora. This framework is generic, language independent, integrated and contains a freely available implementation, the mwetoolkit. It is composed of independent modules which may themselves use multiple techniques to solve a specific sub-task in MWE acquisition. The evaluation of MWE acquisition is modelled using four independent axes. We underline that the evaluation results depend on parameters of the acquisition context, e.g., nature and size of corpora, language and type of MWE, analysis depth, and existing resources. The second main contribution of this thesis is the application-oriented evaluation of our methodology proposal in two applications: computer-assisted lexicography and statistical machine translation. For the former, we evaluate the usefulness of automatic MWE acquisition with the mwetoolkit for creating three lexicons: Greek nominal expressions, Portuguese complex predicates and Portuguese sentiment expressions. For the latter, we test several integration strategies in order to improve the treatment given to English phrasal verbs when translated by a standard statistical MT system into Portuguese. Both applications can benefit from automatic MWE acquisition, as the expressions acquired automatically from corpora can both speed up and improve the quality of the results. The promising results of previous and ongoing experiments encourage further investigation about the optimal way to integrate MWE treatment into other applications. Thus, we conclude the thesis with an overview of the past, ongoing and future work
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