DocumentCode
234343
Title
Word processing for Arabic language: A reappraisal of morphology induction through adaptive memory self-organisation strategies
Author
Marzi, Claudia ; Nahli, Ouafae ; Ferro, Marcello
Author_Institution
Inst. for Comput. Linguistics, Pisa, Italy
fYear
2014
fDate
20-22 Oct. 2014
Firstpage
241
Lastpage
247
Abstract
Modelling the mental lexicon focuses on processing and storage dynamics, since lexical organisation relies on the process of input recoding and adaptive strategies for long-term memory organisation. A fundamental issue in word processing is represented by the emergence of the morphological organisation level in the lexicon, based on paradigmatic relations between fully-stored word forms. Morphology induction can be defined as the task of identifying morphological formatives within morphologically complex word forms. In the computational framework we propose here (TSOMs), based on Self-Organising Maps with Hebbian connections defined over a temporal layer, the identification/perception of surface morphological relations involves the alignment of recoded representations of morphologically-related input words. Facing a non-concatenative morphology such as the Arabic inflectional system prompts a reappraisal of morphology induction through adaptive organisation strategies, which affect both lexical representations and long-term storage. We will show how a strongly adaptive self-organisation during training is conducive to emergent relations between stored word forms, and to high accuracy rates in generalising knowledge of stored words to unknown forms.
Keywords
Hebbian learning; natural language processing; self-organising feature maps; word processing; Arabic inflectional system; Arabic language; Hebbian connections; TSOM; adaptive memory self-organisation strategies; computational framework; fully-stored word forms; input recoding process; lexical organisation; long-term memory organisation; mental lexicon modelling; morphological formatives; morphological organisation level; morphologically complex word forms; morphologically-related input words; morphology induction reappraisal; nonconcatenative morphology; paradigmatic relations; processing dynamics; self-organising maps; storage dynamics; surface morphological relation identification; surface morphological relation perception; temporal layer; word processing; Accuracy; Adaptive systems; Decision support systems; Morphology; Surface morphology; Text processing; Training; Non-concatenative morphological structure; lexical storage and access; self-organising maps; synchronisation; topological alignment; word recoding and processing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Information Science and Technology (CIST), 2014 Third IEEE International Colloquium in
Conference_Location
Tetouan
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-5978-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CIST.2014.7016626
Filename
7016626
Link To Document