1 research outputs found
Modelling the Lexicon in Unsupervised Part of Speech Induction
Automatically inducing the syntactic part-of-speech categories for words in
text is a fundamental task in Computational Linguistics. While the performance
of unsupervised tagging models has been slowly improving, current
state-of-the-art systems make the obviously incorrect assumption that all
tokens of a given word type must share a single part-of-speech tag. This
one-tag-per-type heuristic counters the tendency of Hidden Markov Model based
taggers to over generate tags for a given word type. However, it is clearly
incompatible with basic syntactic theory. In this paper we extend a
state-of-the-art Pitman-Yor Hidden Markov Model tagger with an explicit model
of the lexicon. In doing so we are able to incorporate a soft bias towards
inducing few tags per type. We develop a particle filter for drawing samples
from the posterior of our model and present empirical results that show that
our model is competitive with and faster than the state-of-the-art without
making any unrealistic restrictions.Comment: To be presented at the 14th Conference of the European Chapter of the
Association for Computational Linguistic