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Hamiltonian Monte Carlo Acceleration Using Surrogate Functions with Random Bases
For big data analysis, high computational cost for Bayesian methods often
limits their applications in practice. In recent years, there have been many
attempts to improve computational efficiency of Bayesian inference. Here we
propose an efficient and scalable computational technique for a
state-of-the-art Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) methods, namely, Hamiltonian
Monte Carlo (HMC). The key idea is to explore and exploit the structure and
regularity in parameter space for the underlying probabilistic model to
construct an effective approximation of its geometric properties. To this end,
we build a surrogate function to approximate the target distribution using
properly chosen random bases and an efficient optimization process. The
resulting method provides a flexible, scalable, and efficient sampling
algorithm, which converges to the correct target distribution. We show that by
choosing the basis functions and optimization process differently, our method
can be related to other approaches for the construction of surrogate functions
such as generalized additive models or Gaussian process models. Experiments
based on simulated and real data show that our approach leads to substantially
more efficient sampling algorithms compared to existing state-of-the art
methods
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Minimally supervised induction of morphology through bitexts
textA knowledge of morphology can be useful for many natural language processing systems. Thus, much effort has been expended in developing accurate computational tools for morphology that lemmatize, segment and generate new forms. The most powerful and accurate of these have been manually encoded, such endeavors being without exception expensive and time-consuming. There have been consequently many attempts to reduce this cost in the development of morphological systems through the development of unsupervised or minimally supervised algorithms and learning methods for acquisition of morphology. These efforts have yet to produce a tool that approaches the performance of manually encoded systems.
Here, I present a strategy for dealing with morphological clustering and segmentation in a minimally supervised manner but one that will be more linguistically informed than previous unsupervised approaches. That is, this study will attempt to induce clusters of words from an unannotated text that are inflectional variants of each other. Then a set of inflectional suffixes by part-of-speech will be induced from these clusters. This level of detail is made possible by a method known as alignment and transfer (AT), among other names, an approach that uses aligned bitexts to transfer linguistic resources developed for one language–the source language–to another language–the target. This approach has a further advantage in that it allows a reduction in the amount of training data without a significant degradation in performance making it useful in applications targeted at data collected from endangered languages. In the current study, however, I use English as the source and German as the target for ease of evaluation and for certain typlogical properties of German. The two main tasks, that of clustering and segmentation, are approached as sequential tasks with the clustering informing the segmentation to allow for greater accuracy in morphological analysis.
While the performance of these methods does not exceed the current roster of unsupervised or minimally supervised approaches to morphology acquisition, it attempts to integrate more learning methods than previous studies. Furthermore, it attempts to learn inflectional morphology as opposed to derivational morphology, which is a crucial distinction in linguistics.Linguistic
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