What Kind of Language Is Hard to Language-Model?
June 11, 2019 ยท Declared Dead ยท ๐ Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics
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Authors
Sabrina J. Mielke, Ryan Cotterell, Kyle Gorman, Brian Roark, Jason Eisner
arXiv ID
1906.04726
Category
cs.CL: Computation & Language
Citations
91
Venue
Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics
Last Checked
4 months ago
Abstract
How language-agnostic are current state-of-the-art NLP tools? Are there some types of language that are easier to model with current methods? In prior work (Cotterell et al., 2018) we attempted to address this question for language modeling, and observed that recurrent neural network language models do not perform equally well over all the high-resource European languages found in the Europarl corpus. We speculated that inflectional morphology may be the primary culprit for the discrepancy. In this paper, we extend these earlier experiments to cover 69 languages from 13 language families using a multilingual Bible corpus. Methodologically, we introduce a new paired-sample multiplicative mixed-effects model to obtain language difficulty coefficients from at-least-pairwise parallel corpora. In other words, the model is aware of inter-sentence variation and can handle missing data. Exploiting this model, we show that "translationese" is not any easier to model than natively written language in a fair comparison. Trying to answer the question of what features difficult languages have in common, we try and fail to reproduce our earlier (Cotterell et al., 2018) observation about morphological complexity and instead reveal far simpler statistics of the data that seem to drive complexity in a much larger sample.
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