473 research outputs found
A Syllable-based Technique for Word Embeddings of Korean Words
Word embedding has become a fundamental component to many NLP tasks such as
named entity recognition and machine translation. However, popular models that
learn such embeddings are unaware of the morphology of words, so it is not
directly applicable to highly agglutinative languages such as Korean. We
propose a syllable-based learning model for Korean using a convolutional neural
network, in which word representation is composed of trained syllable vectors.
Our model successfully produces morphologically meaningful representation of
Korean words compared to the original Skip-gram embeddings. The results also
show that it is quite robust to the Out-of-Vocabulary problem.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, 1 table. Accepted for EMNLP 2017 Workshop - The
1st Workshop on Subword and Character level models in NLP (SCLeM
Learning Character-level Compositionality with Visual Features
Previous work has modeled the compositionality of words by creating
character-level models of meaning, reducing problems of sparsity for rare
words. However, in many writing systems compositionality has an effect even on
the character-level: the meaning of a character is derived by the sum of its
parts. In this paper, we model this effect by creating embeddings for
characters based on their visual characteristics, creating an image for the
character and running it through a convolutional neural network to produce a
visual character embedding. Experiments on a text classification task
demonstrate that such model allows for better processing of instances with rare
characters in languages such as Chinese, Japanese, and Korean. Additionally,
qualitative analyses demonstrate that our proposed model learns to focus on the
parts of characters that carry semantic content, resulting in embeddings that
are coherent in visual space.Comment: Accepted to ACL 201
COMIC: Towards A Compact Image Captioning Model with Attention
Recent works in image captioning have shown very promising raw performance.
However, we realize that most of these encoder-decoder style networks with
attention do not scale naturally to large vocabulary size, making them
difficult to be deployed on embedded system with limited hardware resources.
This is because the size of word and output embedding matrices grow
proportionally with the size of vocabulary, adversely affecting the compactness
of these networks. To address this limitation, this paper introduces a brand
new idea in the domain of image captioning. That is, we tackle the problem of
compactness of image captioning models which is hitherto unexplored. We showed
that, our proposed model, named COMIC for COMpact Image Captioning, achieves
comparable results in five common evaluation metrics with state-of-the-art
approaches on both MS-COCO and InstaPIC-1.1M datasets despite having an
embedding vocabulary size that is 39x - 99x smaller. The source code and models
are available at:
https://github.com/jiahuei/COMIC-Compact-Image-Captioning-with-AttentionComment: Added source code link and new results in Table
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