28 research outputs found

    Machine translation evaluation resources and methods: a survey

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    We introduce the Machine Translation (MT) evaluation survey that contains both manual and automatic evaluation methods. The traditional human evaluation criteria mainly include the intelligibility, fidelity, fluency, adequacy, comprehension, and informativeness. The advanced human assessments include task-oriented measures, post-editing, segment ranking, and extended criteriea, etc. We classify the automatic evaluation methods into two categories, including lexical similarity scenario and linguistic features application. The lexical similarity methods contain edit distance, precision, recall, F-measure, and word order. The linguistic features can be divided into syntactic features and semantic features respectively. The syntactic features include part of speech tag, phrase types and sentence structures, and the semantic features include named entity, synonyms, textual entailment, paraphrase, semantic roles, and language models. The deep learning models for evaluation are very newly proposed. Subsequently, we also introduce the evaluation methods for MT evaluation including different correlation scores, and the recent quality estimation (QE) tasks for MT. This paper differs from the existing works\cite {GALEprogram2009, EuroMatrixProject2007} from several aspects, by introducing some recent development of MT evaluation measures, the different classifications from manual to automatic evaluation measures, the introduction of recent QE tasks of MT, and the concise construction of the content

    A tree does not make a well-formed sentence: Improving syntactic string-to-tree statistical machine translation with more linguistic knowledge

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    AbstractSynchronous context-free grammars (SCFGs) can be learned from parallel texts that are annotated with target-side syntax, and can produce translations by building target-side syntactic trees from source strings. Ideally, producing syntactic trees would entail that the translation is grammatically well-formed, but in reality, this is often not the case. Focusing on translation into German, we discuss various ways in which string-to-tree translation models over- or undergeneralise. We show how these problems can be addressed by choosing a suitable parser and modifying its output, by introducing linguistic constraints that enforce morphological agreement and constrain subcategorisation, and by modelling the productive generation of German compounds

    Linguistic Structure in Statistical Machine Translation

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    This thesis investigates the influence of linguistic structure in statistical machine translation. We develop a word reordering model based on syntactic parse trees and address the issues of pronouns and morphological agreement with a source discriminative word lexicon predicting the translation for individual words using structural features. When used in phrase-based machine translation, the models improve the translation for language pairs with different word order and morphological variation

    Coherence in Machine Translation

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    Coherence ensures individual sentences work together to form a meaningful document. When properly translated, a coherent document in one language should result in a coherent document in another language. In Machine Translation, however, due to reasons of modeling and computational complexity, sentences are pieced together from words or phrases based on short context windows and with no access to extra-sentential context. In this thesis I propose ways to automatically assess the coherence of machine translation output. The work is structured around three dimensions: entity-based coherence, coherence as evidenced via syntactic patterns, and coherence as evidenced via discourse relations. For the first time, I evaluate existing monolingual coherence models on this new task, identifying issues and challenges that are specific to the machine translation setting. In order to address these issues, I adapted a state-of-the-art syntax model, which also resulted in improved performance for the monolingual task. The results clearly indicate how much more difficult the new task is than the task of detecting shuffled texts. I proposed a new coherence model, exploring the crosslingual transfer of discourse relations in machine translation. This model is novel in that it measures the correctness of the discourse relation by comparison to the source text rather than to a reference translation. I identified patterns of incoherence common across different language pairs, and created a corpus of machine translated output annotated with coherence errors for evaluation purposes. I then examined lexical coherence in a multilingual context, as a preliminary study for crosslingual transfer. Finally, I determine how the new and adapted models correlate with human judgements of translation quality and suggest that improvements in general evaluation within machine translation would benefit from having a coherence component that evaluated the translation output with respect to the source text

    Robust input representations for low-resource information extraction

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    Recent advances in the field of natural language processing were achieved with deep learning models. This led to a wide range of new research questions concerning the stability of such large-scale systems and their applicability beyond well-studied tasks and datasets, such as information extraction in non-standard domains and languages, in particular, in low-resource environments. In this work, we address these challenges and make important contributions across fields such as representation learning and transfer learning by proposing novel model architectures and training strategies to overcome existing limitations, including a lack of training resources, domain mismatches and language barriers. In particular, we propose solutions to close the domain gap between representation models by, e.g., domain-adaptive pre-training or our novel meta-embedding architecture for creating a joint representations of multiple embedding methods. Our broad set of experiments demonstrates state-of-the-art performance of our methods for various sequence tagging and classification tasks and highlight their robustness in challenging low-resource settings across languages and domains.Die jüngsten Fortschritte auf dem Gebiet der Verarbeitung natürlicher Sprache wurden mit Deep-Learning-Modellen erzielt. Dies führte zu einer Vielzahl neuer Forschungsfragen bezüglich der Stabilität solcher großen Systeme und ihrer Anwendbarkeit über gut untersuchte Aufgaben und Datensätze hinaus, wie z. B. die Informationsextraktion für Nicht-Standardsprachen, aber auch Textdomänen und Aufgaben, für die selbst im Englischen nur wenige Trainingsdaten zur Verfügung stehen. In dieser Arbeit gehen wir auf diese Herausforderungen ein und leisten wichtige Beiträge in Bereichen wie Repräsentationslernen und Transferlernen, indem wir neuartige Modellarchitekturen und Trainingsstrategien vorschlagen, um bestehende Beschränkungen zu überwinden, darunter fehlende Trainingsressourcen, ungesehene Domänen und Sprachbarrieren. Insbesondere schlagen wir Lösungen vor, um die Domänenlücke zwischen Repräsentationsmodellen zu schließen, z.B. durch domänenadaptives Vortrainieren oder unsere neuartige Meta-Embedding-Architektur zur Erstellung einer gemeinsamen Repräsentation mehrerer Embeddingmethoden. Unsere umfassende Evaluierung demonstriert die Leistungsfähigkeit unserer Methoden für verschiedene Klassifizierungsaufgaben auf Word und Satzebene und unterstreicht ihre Robustheit in anspruchsvollen, ressourcenarmen Umgebungen in verschiedenen Sprachen und Domänen

    A Hybrid Machine Translation Framework for an Improved Translation Workflow

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    Over the past few decades, due to a continuing surge in the amount of content being translated and ever increasing pressure to deliver high quality and high throughput translation, translation industries are focusing their interest on adopting advanced technologies such as machine translation (MT), and automatic post-editing (APE) in their translation workflows. Despite the progress of the technology, the roles of humans and machines essentially remain intact as MT/APE are moving from the peripheries of the translation field closer towards collaborative human-machine based MT/APE in modern translation workflows. Professional translators increasingly become post-editors correcting raw MT/APE output instead of translating from scratch which in turn increases productivity in terms of translation speed. The last decade has seen substantial growth in research and development activities on improving MT; usually concentrating on selected aspects of workflows starting from training data pre-processing techniques to core MT processes to post-editing methods. To date, however, complete MT workflows are less investigated than the core MT processes. In the research presented in this thesis, we investigate avenues towards achieving improved MT workflows. We study how different MT paradigms can be utilized and integrated to best effect. We also investigate how different upstream and downstream component technologies can be hybridized to achieve overall improved MT. Finally we include an investigation into human-machine collaborative MT by taking humans in the loop. In many of (but not all) the experiments presented in this thesis we focus on data scenarios provided by low resource language settings.Aufgrund des stetig ansteigenden Übersetzungsvolumens in den letzten Jahrzehnten und gleichzeitig wachsendem Druck hohe Qualität innerhalb von kürzester Zeit liefern zu müssen sind Übersetzungsdienstleister darauf angewiesen, moderne Technologien wie Maschinelle Übersetzung (MT) und automatisches Post-Editing (APE) in den Übersetzungsworkflow einzubinden. Trotz erheblicher Fortschritte dieser Technologien haben sich die Rollen von Mensch und Maschine kaum verändert. MT/APE ist jedoch nunmehr nicht mehr nur eine Randerscheinung, sondern wird im modernen Übersetzungsworkflow zunehmend in Zusammenarbeit von Mensch und Maschine eingesetzt. Fachübersetzer werden immer mehr zu Post-Editoren und korrigieren den MT/APE-Output, statt wie bisher Übersetzungen komplett neu anzufertigen. So kann die Produktivität bezüglich der Übersetzungsgeschwindigkeit gesteigert werden. Im letzten Jahrzehnt hat sich in den Bereichen Forschung und Entwicklung zur Verbesserung von MT sehr viel getan: Einbindung des vollständigen Übersetzungsworkflows von der Vorbereitung der Trainingsdaten über den eigentlichen MT-Prozess bis hin zu Post-Editing-Methoden. Der vollständige Übersetzungsworkflow wird jedoch aus Datenperspektive weit weniger berücksichtigt als der eigentliche MT-Prozess. In dieser Dissertation werden Wege hin zum idealen oder zumindest verbesserten MT-Workflow untersucht. In den Experimenten wird dabei besondere Aufmertsamfit auf die speziellen Belange von sprachen mit geringen ressourcen gelegt. Es wird untersucht wie unterschiedliche MT-Paradigmen verwendet und optimal integriert werden können. Des Weiteren wird dargestellt wie unterschiedliche vor- und nachgelagerte Technologiekomponenten angepasst werden können, um insgesamt einen besseren MT-Output zu generieren. Abschließend wird gezeigt wie der Mensch in den MT-Workflow intergriert werden kann. Das Ziel dieser Arbeit ist es verschiedene Technologiekomponenten in den MT-Workflow zu integrieren um so einen verbesserten Gesamtworkflow zu schaffen. Hierfür werden hauptsächlich Hybridisierungsansätze verwendet. In dieser Arbeit werden außerdem Möglichkeiten untersucht, Menschen effektiv als Post-Editoren einzubinden
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