2,060 research outputs found
Transfer learning and subword sampling for asymmetric-resource one-to-many neural translation
There are several approaches for improving neural machine translation for low-resource languages: monolingual data can be exploited via pretraining or data augmentation; parallel corpora on related language pairs can be used via parameter sharing or transfer learning in multilingual models; subword segmentation and regularization techniques can be applied to ensure high coverage of the vocabulary. We review these approaches in the context of an asymmetric-resource one-to-many translation task, in which the pair of target languages are related, with one being a very low-resource and the other a higher-resource language. We test various methods on three artificially restricted translation tasksâEnglish to Estonian (low-resource) and Finnish (high-resource), English to Slovak and Czech, English to Danish and Swedishâand one real-world task, Norwegian to North SĂĄmi and Finnish. The experiments show positive effects especially for scheduled multi-task learning, denoising autoencoder, and subword sampling.There are several approaches for improving neural machine translation for low-resource languages: monolingual data can be exploited via pretraining or data augmentation; parallel corpora on related language pairs can be used via parameter sharing or transfer learning in multilingual models; subword segmentation and regularization techniques can be applied to ensure high coverage of the vocabulary. We review these approaches in the context of an asymmetric-resource one-to-many translation task, in which the pair of target languages are related, with one being a very low-resource and the other a higher-resource language. We test various methods on three artificially restricted translation tasks-English to Estonian (low-resource) and Finnish (high-resource), English to Slovak and Czech, English to Danish and Swedish-and one real-world task, Norwegian to North Sami and Finnish. The experiments show positive effects especially for scheduled multi-task learning, denoising autoencoder, and subword sampling.Peer reviewe
Lessons learned in multilingual grounded language learning
Recent work has shown how to learn better visual-semantic embeddings by
leveraging image descriptions in more than one language. Here, we investigate
in detail which conditions affect the performance of this type of grounded
language learning model. We show that multilingual training improves over
bilingual training, and that low-resource languages benefit from training with
higher-resource languages. We demonstrate that a multilingual model can be
trained equally well on either translations or comparable sentence pairs, and
that annotating the same set of images in multiple language enables further
improvements via an additional caption-caption ranking objective.Comment: CoNLL 201
From Word to Sense Embeddings: A Survey on Vector Representations of Meaning
Over the past years, distributed semantic representations have proved to be
effective and flexible keepers of prior knowledge to be integrated into
downstream applications. This survey focuses on the representation of meaning.
We start from the theoretical background behind word vector space models and
highlight one of their major limitations: the meaning conflation deficiency,
which arises from representing a word with all its possible meanings as a
single vector. Then, we explain how this deficiency can be addressed through a
transition from the word level to the more fine-grained level of word senses
(in its broader acceptation) as a method for modelling unambiguous lexical
meaning. We present a comprehensive overview of the wide range of techniques in
the two main branches of sense representation, i.e., unsupervised and
knowledge-based. Finally, this survey covers the main evaluation procedures and
applications for this type of representation, and provides an analysis of four
of its important aspects: interpretability, sense granularity, adaptability to
different domains and compositionality.Comment: 46 pages, 8 figures. Published in Journal of Artificial Intelligence
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