Syntax-Based Statistical Machine Translation (Synthesis Lectures on Human Language Technologies)

by Philip Williams, Rico Sennrich, Matt Post, and Philipp Koehn

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Book cover for Syntax-Based Statistical Machine Translation

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This unique book provides a comprehensive introduction to the most popular syntax-based statistical machine translation models, filling a gap in the current literature for researchers and developers in human language technologies. While phrase-based models have previously dominated the field, syntax-based approaches have proved a popular alternative, as they elegantly solve many of the shortcomings of phrase-based models. The heart of this book is a detailed introduction to decoding for syntax-based models.

The book begins with an overview of synchronous-context free grammar (SCFG) and synchronous tree-substitution grammar (STSG) along with their associated statistical models. It also describes how three popular instantiations (Hiero, SAMT, and GHKM) are learned from parallel corpora. It introduces and details hypergraphs and associated general algorithms, as well as algorithms for decoding with both tree and string input. Special attention is given to efficiency, including search approximations such as beam search and cube pruning, data structures, and parsing algorithms. The book consistently highlights the strengths (and limitations) of syntax-based approaches, including their ability to generalize phrase-based translation units, their modeling of specific linguistic phenomena, and their function of structuring the search space.

  • ISBN10 1627055029
  • ISBN13 9781627055024
  • Publish Date 1 August 2016
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint Morgan & Claypool
  • Format eBook
  • Pages 208
  • Language English