DocumentCode
1857319
Title
No more strings, please
Author
Knight, K.
Author_Institution
Inf. Sci. Inst., Southern California Univ., Los Angeles, CA
fYear
2006
fDate
10-13 Dec. 2006
Firstpage
2
Lastpage
2
Abstract
Summary form only given. In natural language research, many (grammar) trees were felled in 1992, to make room for the highly successful string-based HMM industry. A small literature survived on parsing (putting a tree on a string) and syntactic language modeling (putting a weight on a string). However, trees are making a comeback. Tree transformations are turning out to be very useful in large-scale machine translation (MT), and we will cover recent developments in this area. Most of the tree techniques used in MT turn out to be generic, leading to tools and software for manipulating tree automata in general. Tree acceptors and transducers generalize HMM techniques to the world of trees, raising many interesting theoretical and practical problems.
Keywords
automata theory; grammars; hidden Markov models; language translation; grammar trees; large-scale machine translation; parsing; string-based HMM industry; syntactic language modeling; tree automata; tree transformations; Automata; Hidden Markov models; Large-scale systems; Natural languages; Software tools; Transducers; Turning;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Spoken Language Technology Workshop, 2006. IEEE
Conference_Location
Palm Beach
Print_ISBN
1-4244-0872-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/SLT.2006.326779
Filename
4123342
Link To Document