In proceedings details

  • Identification of Bilingual Suffix Classes for Classification and Translation Generation
  • Nov 2014
  • We examine the possibility of learning bilingual morphol- ogy using the translation forms taken from an existing, manually validated, bilingual translation lexicon. The objective is to evaluate the use of bilingual stem and suffix based features on the performance of the existing Support Vector Machine based classifier trained to classify the automatically extracted word-to-word translations. We initially induce the bilingual stem and suffix correspondences by considering the longest sequence common to orthogonally similar translations. Clusters of stem-pairs characterised by identical suffix-pairs are formed, which are then used to generate out-of-vocabulary translations that are identical to, but different from, the previously existing translations, thereby completing the existing lexicon. Using the bilingual stem and suffix correspondences induced from the augmented lexicon we come up with 5 new features that reflects the (non)existence of morphological coverage (agreement) between a term and its translation. Specifically, we examine and evaluate the use of suffix classes, bilingual stem and suffix correspondences as features in selecting correct word-to-word translations from among the automatically extracted ones. With a training data of approximately 35.8K word translations for the language pair English-Portuguese, we identified around 6.4K unique stem pairs and 0.25K unique suffix pairs. Further, experimental results show that the newly added features improved the word-to-word classification accuracy by 9.11% leading to an overall improvement in the classifier accuracy by 2.15% when all translations (single- and multi-word translations) were considered.
  • Springer Berlin Heidelberg
  • Kavitha Mahesh, Luís Gomes, Gabriel Pereira Lopes
  • Lecture Notes in Computer Science
  • 0
  • 0 to 0
  • 1 Nov 2014