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Adaptor Grammars for Learning Non−Concatenative Morphology

Jan A. Botha and Phil Blunsom

Abstract

This paper contributes an approach for expressing non-concatenative morphological phenomena, such as stem derivation in Semitic languages, in terms of a mildly context-sensitive grammar formalism. This offers a convenient level of modelling abstraction while remaining computationally tractable. The nonparametric Bayesian framework of adaptor grammars is extended to this richer grammar formalism to propose a probabilistic model that can learn word segmentation and morpheme lexicons, including ones with discontiguous strings as elements, from unannotated data. Our experiments on Hebrew and three variants of Arabic data find that the additional expressiveness to capture roots and templates as atomic units improves the quality of concatenative segmentation and stem identification. We obtain 74% accuracy in identifying triliteral Hebrew roots, while performing morphological segmentation with an F1-score of 78.1.

Address
Seattle‚ Washington‚ USA
Book Title
Proceedings of the 2013 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing
Month
October
Pages
345−356
Publisher
Association for Computational Linguistics
Year
2013