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The Practical Value of Statistics for Sentence Generation: The Perspective of the Nitrogen System

The Practical Value of Statistics for Sentence Generation: The Perspective of the Nitrogen System. Irene Langkilde-Geary. How well do statistical n-grams make linguistic decisions?. Subject-Verb Agreement Article-Noun Agreement

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The Practical Value of Statistics for Sentence Generation: The Perspective of the Nitrogen System

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  1. The Practical Value of Statistics for Sentence Generation:The Perspective of the Nitrogen System Irene Langkilde-Geary

  2. How well do statistical n-grams make linguistic decisions? Subject-Verb AgreementArticle-Noun Agreement I am 2797 a trust 394 an trust 0 the trust 1355 I are 47 a trusts 2 an trusts 0 the trusts 115 I is 14 Singular vs PluralWord Choice their trust 28 reliance 567 trust 6100 their trusts 8 reliances 0 trusts 1083

  3. More Examples Relative pronounPreposition visitor who 9 visitors who 20 in Japan 5413 to Japan 1196 visitor which 0 visitors which 0 visitor that 9 visitors that 14 came to 2443 arrived in 544 came in 1498 arrived to 35 Singular vs Plural came into 244 arrived into 0 visitor 575 visitors 1083 came to Japan 7 arrived to Japan 0 Verb Tense came into Jap 1 arrived into Japan 0 admire 212 admired 211 came in Japan 0 arrived in Japan 4 admires 107

  4. How can we get a computer to learn by “reading”?

  5. Nitrogen takes a two-step approach • Enumerate all possible expressions • Rank them in order of probabilistic likelihood Why two steps? They are independent.

  6. Assigning probabilities • Ngram model Formula for bigrams: P(S) = P(w1|START) * P(w2|w1) * … * P(w n|w n-2) • Probabilistic syntax (current work) • A variant of probabilistic parsing models

  7. Sample Results of Bigram model Random path: (out of a set of 11,664,000 semantically-related sentences) Visitant which came into the place where it will be Japanese has admired that there was Mount Fuji. Top three: Visitors who came in Japan admire Mount Fuji . Visitors who came in Japan admires Mount Fuji . Visitors who arrived in Japan admire Mount Fuji . Strengths • Reflects reality that 55% (Stolke et al. 1997) of dependencies are binary, and between adjacent words • Embeds linear ordering constraints

  8. Limitations of Bigram model ExampleReason Visitors come inJapan. A three-way dependency He planned increase in sales. Part-of-speech ambiguity A tourist who admire Mt. Fuji... Long-distance dependency A dog eat/eats bone. Previously unseen ngrams I cannot sell their trust. Nonsensical head-arg relationship The methods must be modified to Improper subcat structure the circumstances.

  9. Representation of enumerated possibilities(Easily on the order of 1015 to 1032 or more) • List • Lattice • Forest • Issues • space/time constraints • redundancy • localization of dependencies • non-uniform weights of dependencies

  10. Number of phrases versus size (in bytes) for 15 sample inputs

  11. Number of phrases versus time (in seconds)for 15 sample inputs

  12. Generating from Templates and Meaning-based Inputs INPUT  ( <label> <feature> VALUE ) VALUE  INPUT -OR- <label> Labels are defined in: • input • user-defined lexicon • WordNet-based lexicon (~ 100,000 concepts) Example Input: (a1 :template (a2 / “eat” :agent YOU :patient a3) :filler (a3 / |poulet| ))

  13. Mapping Rules • Recast one input to another • (implicitly providing varying levels of abstraction) • Assign linear order to constituents • Add missing info to under-specified inputs Matching Algorithm • Rule order determines priority. Generally: • Recasting < linear ordering < under-specification • High (more semantic) level of abstraction < low (more syntactic) • Distant position (adjuncts) from head < near (complements) • Basic properties < specialized

  14. (a1 :venue <venue> :cusine <cuisine> ) (a2 / |serve| :agent <venue> :patient <cuisine> ) (a2 / |have the quality of being| :domain (a3 / “food type” :possessed-by <venue>) :range (b1 / |cuisine|)) Recasting

  15. (a1 :venue <venue> :region <region> ) (a2 / |serve| :agent <venue> :patient <cuisine> (a3 / |serve| :voice active :subject <venue> :object <cuisine> ) (a3 / |serve| :voice passive :subject <cuisine> :adjunct (b1 / <venue> :anchor |BY| )) Recasting

  16. Linear ordering (a3 / |serve| :voice active :subject <venue> :object <cuisine> ) <venue> (a4 / |serve| :voice active :object <cuisine> )

  17. Under-specification (a4 / |serve|) (a6 / |serve| :cat noun) (a5 / |serve| :cat verb)

  18. Under-specification (a4 / |serve|) (a5 / |serve| :cat verb) (a5 / |serve| :cat verb :tense past) (a5 / |serve| :cat verb :tense present)

  19. Core features currently recognized by Nitrogen Syntactic relations :subject :object :dative :compl :pred :adjunct :anchor :pronoun :op :modal :taxis :aspect :voice :article Functional relations :logical-sbj :logical-obj :logical-dat:obliq1 :obliq2 :obliq3 :obliq2-of :obliq3-of :obliq1-of :attr :generalized-possesion :generalized-possesion-inverse Semantic/Systemic Relations :agent :patient :domain :domain-of :condition :consequence :reason :compared-to :quant :purpose :exemplifier :spatial-locating :temporal-locating :temporal-locating-of :during :destination :means :manner :role :role-of-agent :source :role-of-patient :inclusive :accompanier :sans :time :name :ord Dependency relations :arg1 :arg2 :arg3 :arg1-of :arg2-of :arg3-of

  20. Properties used by Nitrogen :cat [nn, vv, jj, rb, etc.] :polarity [+, -] :number [sing, plural] :tense [past, present] :person [1s 2s 3s 1p 2p 3p s p all] :mood [indicative, pres-part, past-part, infinitive, to-inf, imper]

  21. How many grammar rules needed for English? Sentence  Constituent+ Constituent  Constituent+ OR Leaf Leaf  Punc* FunctionWord* ContentWord FunctionWord* Punc* FunctionWord  ``and'' OR ``or'' OR ``to'' OR ``on'' OR ``is'' OR ``been'' OR ``the'' OR …. ContentWord  Inflection(RootWord,Morph) RootWord  ``dog'' OR ``eat'' OR ``red'' OR .... Morph  none OR plural OR third-person-singular ...

  22. Computational Complexity (x2/A2) + (y2/B2) = 1 ??? Y X

  23. Advantages of a statistical approachfor symbolic generation module • Shifts focus from “grammatical” to “possible” • Significantly simplifies knowledge bases • Broadens coverage • Potentially improves quality of output • Dramatically reduces information demands on client • Greatly increases robustness

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