Publication | Closed Access
A variable-length category-based n-gram language model
106
Citations
5
References
2002
Year
Unknown Venue
Ambiguous Category MembershipEngineeringPart-of-speech TaggingCorpus LinguisticsText MiningNatural Language ProcessingSyntaxInformation RetrievalData ScienceComputational LinguisticsLanguage EngineeringGrammarLanguage StudiesMachine TranslationNlp TaskLanguage TechnologyTerminology ExtractionStatistical Tagging OperationLanguage RecognitionLinguisticsPo Tagging
A language model based on word-category n-grams and ambiguous category membership with n increased selectively to trade compactness for performance is presented. The use of categories leads intrinsically to a compact model with the ability to generalise to unseen word sequences, and diminishes the sparseness of the training data, thereby making larger n feasible. The language model implicitly involves a statistical tagging operation, which may be used explicitly to assign category assignments to untagged text. Experiments on the LOB corpus show the optimal model-building strategy to yield improved results with respect to conventional n-gram methods, and when used as a tagger, the model is seen to perform well in relation to a standard benchmark.
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