551 research outputs found
A Deep Network Model for Paraphrase Detection in Short Text Messages
This paper is concerned with paraphrase detection. The ability to detect
similar sentences written in natural language is crucial for several
applications, such as text mining, text summarization, plagiarism detection,
authorship authentication and question answering. Given two sentences, the
objective is to detect whether they are semantically identical. An important
insight from this work is that existing paraphrase systems perform well when
applied on clean texts, but they do not necessarily deliver good performance
against noisy texts. Challenges with paraphrase detection on user generated
short texts, such as Twitter, include language irregularity and noise. To cope
with these challenges, we propose a novel deep neural network-based approach
that relies on coarse-grained sentence modeling using a convolutional neural
network and a long short-term memory model, combined with a specific
fine-grained word-level similarity matching model. Our experimental results
show that the proposed approach outperforms existing state-of-the-art
approaches on user-generated noisy social media data, such as Twitter texts,
and achieves highly competitive performance on a cleaner corpus
Assessing the contribution of shallow and deep knowledge sources for word sense disambiguation
Corpus-based techniques have proved to be very beneficial in the development of efficient and accurate approaches to word sense disambiguation (WSD) despite the fact that they generally represent relatively shallow knowledge. It has always been thought, however, that WSD could also benefit from deeper knowledge sources. We describe a novel approach to WSD using inductive logic programming to learn theories from first-order logic representations that allows corpus-based evidence to be combined with any kind of background knowledge. This approach has been shown to be effective over several disambiguation tasks using a combination of deep and shallow knowledge sources. Is it important to understand the contribution of the various knowledge sources used in such a system. This paper investigates the contribution of nine knowledge sources to the performance of the disambiguation models produced for the SemEval-2007 English lexical sample task. The outcome of this analysis will assist future work on WSD in concentrating on the most useful knowledge sources
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Inducing grammars from linguistic universals and realistic amounts of supervision
The best performing NLP models to date are learned from large volumes of manually-annotated data. For tasks like part-of-speech tagging and grammatical parsing, high performance can be achieved with plentiful supervised data. However, such resources are extremely costly to produce, making them an unlikely option for building NLP tools in under-resourced languages or domains. This dissertation is concerned with reducing the annotation required to learn NLP models, with the goal of opening up the range of domains and languages to which NLP technologies may be applied. In this work, we explore the possibility of learning from a degree of supervision that is at or close to the amount that could reasonably be collected from annotators for a particular domain or language that currently has none. We show that just a small amount of annotation input — even that which can be collected in just a few hours — can provide enormous advantages if we have learning algorithms that can appropriately exploit it. This work presents new algorithms, models, and approaches designed to learn grammatical information from weak supervision. In particular, we look at ways of intersecting a variety of different forms of supervision in complementary ways, thus lowering the overall annotation burden. Sources of information include tag dictionaries, morphological analyzers, constituent bracketings, and partial tree annotations, as well as unannotated corpora. For example, we present algorithms that are able to combine faster-to-obtain type-level annotation with unannotated text to remove the need for slower-to-obtain token-level annotation. Much of this dissertation describes work on Combinatory Categorial Grammar (CCG), a grammatical formalism notable for its use of structured, logic-backed categories that describe how each word and constituent fits into the overall syntax of the sentence. This work shows how linguistic universals intrinsic to the CCG formalism itself can be encoded as Bayesian priors to improve learning.Computer Science
Multi-Task Learning of Keyphrase Boundary Classification
Keyphrase boundary classification (KBC) is the task of detecting keyphrases
in scientific articles and labelling them with respect to predefined types.
Although important in practice, this task is so far underexplored, partly due
to the lack of labelled data. To overcome this, we explore several auxiliary
tasks, including semantic super-sense tagging and identification of multi-word
expressions, and cast the task as a multi-task learning problem with deep
recurrent neural networks. Our multi-task models perform significantly better
than previous state of the art approaches on two scientific KBC datasets,
particularly for long keyphrases.Comment: ACL 201
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