7,051 research outputs found
Constrained word alignment models for statistical machine translation
Word alignment is a fundamental and crucial component in Statistical Machine Translation (SMT) systems. Despite the enormous progress made in the past two decades, this task remains an active research topic simply because the quality of word alignment is still far from optimal. Most state-of-the-art word alignment models are grounded on statistical learning theory treating word alignment as a general sequence alignment problem, where many linguistically motivated insights are not incorporated. In this thesis, we propose new word alignment models with linguistically motivated constraints in a bid to improve the quality of word alignment for Phrase-Based SMT systems (PB-SMT). We start the exploration with an investigation
into segmentation constraints for word alignment by proposing a novel algorithm, namely word packing, which is motivated by the fact that one concept expressed by one word in one language can frequently surface as a compound or
collocation in another language. Our algorithm takes advantage of the interaction between segmentation and alignment, starting with some segmentation for both the
source and target language and updating the segmentation with respect to the word alignment results using state-of-the-art word alignment models; thereafter a refined
word alignment can be obtained based on the updated segmentation. In this process, the updated segmentation acts as a hard constraint on the word alignment
models and reduces the complexity of the alignment models by generating more 1-to-1 correspondences through word packing. Experimental results show that this algorithm can lead to statistically significant improvements over the state-of-the-art word alignment models. Given that word packing imposes "hard" segmentation constraints on the word aligner, which is prone to introducing noise, we propose two
new word alignment models using syntactic dependencies as soft constraints. The first model is a syntactically enhanced discriminative word alignment model, where
we use a set of feature functions to express the syntactic dependency information encoded in both source and target languages. One the one hand, this model enjoys
great flexibility in its capacity to incorporate multiple features; on the other hand, this model is designed to facilitate model tuning for different objective functions.
Experimental results show that using syntactic constraints can improve the performance of the discriminative word alignment model, which also leads to better PB-SMT performance compared to using state-of-the-art word alignment models.
The second model is a syntactically constrained generative word alignment model, where we add in a syntactic coherence model over the target phrases in the context of HMM word-to-phrase alignment. The advantages of our model are that (i) the addition of the syntactic coherence model preserves the efficient parameter estimation procedures; and (ii) the flexibility of the model can be increased so that it can
be tuned according to different objective functions. Experimental results show that tuning this model properly leads to a significant gain in MT performance over the
state-of-the-art
HMM word-to-phrase alignment with dependency constraints
In this paper, we extend the HMMwordto-phrase alignment model with syntactic dependency constraints. The syntactic
dependencies between multiple words in one language are introduced into the model in a bid to produce coherent
alignments. Our experimental results on a variety of Chinese–English data show that our syntactically constrained
model can lead to as much as a 3.24% relative improvement in BLEU score over current HMM word-to-phrase alignment models on a Phrase-Based Statistical Machine Translation system when the training data is small, and a comparable performance compared to IBM model 4 on a Hiero-style system
with larger training data. An intrinsic alignment quality evaluation shows that our alignment model with dependency
constraints leads to improvements in both precision (by 1.74% relative) and recall (by 1.75% relative) over the model without dependency information
Tuning syntactically enhanced word alignment for statistical machine translation
We introduce a syntactically enhanced word alignment model that is more flexible than state-of-the-art generative word
alignment models and can be tuned according to different end tasks. First of all, this model takes the advantages of
both unsupervised and supervised word alignment approaches by obtaining anchor alignments from unsupervised generative
models and seeding the anchor alignments into a supervised discriminative model. Second, this model offers the flexibility of tuning the alignment according to different
optimisation criteria. Our experiments show that using our word alignment in a Phrase-Based Statistical Machine Translation system yields a 5.38% relative increase
on IWSLT 2007 task in terms of BLEU score
Dependency relations as source context in phrase-based SMT
The Phrase-Based Statistical Machine Translation (PB-SMT) model has recently begun to include source context modeling, under the assumption that the proper lexical
choice of an ambiguous word can be determined from the context in which it appears. Various types of lexical and syntactic features such as words, parts-of-speech, and
supertags have been explored as effective source context in SMT. In this paper, we show that position-independent syntactic dependency relations of the head of a source phrase can be modeled as useful source context to improve target phrase selection and thereby improve overall performance of PB-SMT. On a Dutch—English translation task, by combining dependency relations and syntactic contextual features (part-of-speech), we achieved a 1.0 BLEU (Papineni et al., 2002) point improvement (3.1% relative) over the baseline
- …