Integrating Weakly Supervised Word Sense Disambiguation into Neural Machine Translation
Author(s) -
Xiao Pu,
Nikolaos Pappas,
James Henderson,
Andréi Popescu-Belis
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
transactions of the association for computational linguistics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2307-387X
DOI - 10.1162/tacl_a_00242
Subject(s) - computer science , semeval , machine translation , word sense disambiguation , natural language processing , artificial intelligence , concatenation (mathematics) , word (group theory) , context (archaeology) , translation (biology) , noun , selection (genetic algorithm) , point (geometry) , rank (graph theory) , cluster analysis , task (project management) , wordnet , linguistics , mathematics , paleontology , philosophy , biochemistry , chemistry , management , geometry , combinatorics , messenger rna , gene , economics , biology
This paper demonstrates that word sense disambiguation (WSD) can improve neural machine translation (NMT) by widening the source context considered when modeling the senses of potentially ambiguous words. We first introduce three adaptive clustering algorithms for WSD, based on k-means, Chinese restaurant processes, and random walks, which are then applied to large word contexts represented in a low-rank space and evaluated on SemEval shared-task data. We then learn word vectors jointly with sense vectors defined by our best WSD method, within a state-of-the-art NMT system. We show that the concatenation of these vectors, and the use of a sense selection mechanism based on the weighted average of sense vectors, outperforms several baselines including sense-aware ones. This is demonstrated by translation on five language pairs. The improvements are more than 1 BLEU point over strong NMT baselines, +4% accuracy over all ambiguous nouns and verbs, or +20% when scored manually over several challenging words.
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