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CMSC 723 / LING 645: Intro to Computational Linguistics September 22, 2004: Dorr Porter Stemmer, Intro to Probabilistic NLP and N-grams (chap 6.1-6.3) Prof. Bonnie J. Dorr Dr. Christof Monz TA: Adam Lee Computational Morphology (continued) The Rules and the Lexicon – – – – General versus Specific Regular versus Irregular Accuracy, speed, space The Morphology of a language Approaches – Lexicon only – Lexicon and Rules • Finite-state Automata • Finite-state Transducers – Rules only Lexicon-Free Morphology: Porter Stemmer Lexicon-Free FST Approach By Martin Porter (1980) http://www.tartarus.org/%7Emartin/PorterStemmer/ Cascade of substitutions given specific conditions GENERALIZATIONS GENERALIZATION GENERALIZE GENERAL GENER Porter Stemmer Definitions – C = string of one or more consonants, where a consonant is anything other than A E I O U or (Y preceded by C) – V = string of one or more vowels – M = Measure, roughly with number of syllables – Words = (C)*(V*C*)M(V)* • • • M=0 TR, EE, TREE, Y, BY M=1 TROUBLE, OATS, TREES, IVY M=2 TROUBLES, PRIVATE, OATEN, ORRERY Conditions – *S - stem ends with S – *v* - stem contains a V – *d - stem ends with double C, e.g., -TT, -SS – *o - stem ends CVC, where second C is not W, X or Y, e.g., -WIL, HOP *<S> = ends with <S> *v* = contains a V Porter Stemmer *d = ends with double C *o = ends with CVC second C is not W, X or Y Step 1: Plural Nouns and Third Person Singular Verbs SSES SS IES I caresses ponies ties caress cats SS SS S caress poni ti caress cat Step 2a: Verbal Past Tense and Progressive Forms (M>0) EED EE i (*v*) ED ii (*v*) ING feed feed, agreed agree plastered motoring plaster, bled bled motor, sing sing Step 2b: If 2a.i or 2a.ii is successful, Cleanup AT ATE conflat(ed) conflate BL BLE troubl(ed) trouble IZ IZE siz(ed) size (*d and not (*L or *S or *Z)) single letter (M=1 and *o) E hopp(ing) hop, tann(ed) tan hiss(ing) hiss, fizz(ed) fizz fail(ing) fail, fil(ing) file *<S> = ends with <S> *v* = contains a V Porter Stemmer *d = ends with double C *o = ends with CVC second C is not W, X or Y Step 3: Y I (*v*) Y I happy happi sky sky Porter Stemmer Step 4: Derivational Morphology I: Multiple Suffixes (m>0) ATIONAL -> (m>0) TIONAL -> ATE TION (m>0) (m>0) (m>0) (m>0) (m>0) (m>0) (m>0) (m>0) (m>0) (m>0) (m>0) (m>0) (m>0) (m>0) (m>0) (m>0) (m>0) (m>0) ENCE ANCE IZE ABLE AL ENT E OUS IZE ATE ATE AL IVE FUL OUS AL IVE BLE ENCI ANCI IZER ABLI ALLI ENTLI ELI OUSLI IZATION ATION ATOR ALISM IVENESS FULNESS OUSNESS ALITI IVITI BILITI -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> relational -> conditional -> rational -> valenci -> hesitanci -> digitizer -> conformabli -> radicalli -> differentli -> vileli - > analogousli -> vietnamization -> predication -> operator -> feudalism -> decisiveness -> hopefulness -> callousness -> formaliti -> sensitiviti -> sensibiliti -> relate condition rational valence hesitance digitize conformable radical different vile analogous vietnamize predicate operate feudal decisive hopeful callous formal sensitive sensible Porter Stemmer Step 5: Derivational Morphology II: More Multiple Suffixes (m>0) (m>0) (m>0) (m>0) (m>0) (m>0) (m>0) ICATE ATIVE ALIZE ICITI ICAL FUL NESS -> -> -> -> -> -> -> IC AL IC IC triplicate formative formalize electriciti electrical hopeful goodness -> -> -> -> -> -> -> triplic form formal electric electric hope good *<S> = ends with <S> Porter Stemmer *v* = contains a V *d = ends with double C *o = ends with CVC second C is not W, X or Y Step 6: Derivational Morphology III: Single Suffixes (m>1) AL -> (m>1) ANCE -> (m>1) ENCE -> (m>1) ER -> (m>1) IC -> (m>1) ABLE -> (m>1) IBLE -> (m>1) ANT -> (m>1) EMENT -> (m>1) MENT -> (m>1) ENT -> (m>1 and (*S or *T)) ION -> (m>1) OU -> (m>1) ISM -> (m>1) ATE -> (m>1) ITI -> (m>1) OUS -> (m>1) IVE -> (m>1) IZE -> revival allowance inference airliner gyroscopic adjustable defensible irritant replacement adjustment dependent adoption homologou communism activate angulariti homologous effective bowdlerize -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> -> reviv allow infer airlin gyroscop adjust defens irrit replac adjust depend adopt homolog commun activ angular homolog effect bowdler *<S> = ends with <S> Porter Stemmer *v* = contains a V *d = ends with double C *o = ends with CVC second C is not W, X or Y Step 7a: Cleanup (m>1) E (m=1 and not *o) E probate probat rate rate cease ceas Step 7b: More Cleanup (m > 1 and *d and *L) single letter controll control roll roll Porter Stemmer Errors of Omission – – – – – European analysis matrices noise explain Europe analyzes matrix noisy explanation Errors of Commission – – – – – organization doing generalization numerical university From Krovetz ‘93 organ doe generic numerous universe Why (not) Statistics for NLP? Pro – Disambiguation – Error Tolerant – Learnable Con – Not always appropriate – Difficult to debug Weighted Automata/Transducers Speech recognition: storing a pronunciation lexicon Augmentation of FSA: Each arc is associated with a probability Pronunciation network for “about” Noisy Channel Probability Definitions Experiment (trial) – Repeatable procedure with well-defined possible outcomes Sample space – Complete set of outcomes Event – Any subset of outcomes from sample space Random Variable – Uncertain outcome in a trial More Definitions Probability – How likely is it to get a particular outcome? – Rate of getting that outcome in all trials Probability of drawing a spade from 52 well-shuffled playing cards: Distribution: Probabilities associated with each outcome a random variable can take – Each outcome has probability between 0 and 1 – The sum of all outcome probabilities is 1. Conditional Probability What is P(A|B)? First, what is P(A)? – P(“It is raining”) = .06 Now what about P(A|B)? – P(“It is raining” | “It was clear 10 minutes ago”) = .004 P( A, B) P( A | B) P( B) A A,B B Note: P(A,B)=P(A|B) · P(B) Also: P(A,B) = P(B,A) Independence What is P(A,B) if A and B are independent? P(A,B)=P(A) · P(B) iff A,B independent. – P(heads,tails) = P(heads) · P(tails) = .5 · .5 = .25 – P(doctor,blue-eyes) = P(doctor) · P(blue-eyes) = .01 · .2 = .002 What if A,B independent? – P(A|B)=P(A) iff A,B independent – Also: P(B|A)=P(B) iff A,B independent Bayes Theorem P( A | B) P( B) P( B | A) P( A) • Swap the order of dependence • Sometimes easier to estimate one kind of dependence than the other What does this have to do with the Noisy Channel Model? (O) (H) P(H) P(O|H) Best H Best H = argmax P(H|O) = argmax P(O | H ) P( H ) H H P(O) likelihood prior Noisy Channel Applied to Word Recognition argmaxw P(w|O) = argmaxw P(O|w) P(w) Simplifying assumptions – pronunciation string correct – word boundaries known Problem: – Given [n iy], what is correct dictionary word? What do we need? [ni]: knee, neat, need, new What is the most likely word given [ni]? Compute prior P(w) Word freq(w) P(w) new 2625 .001 neat 338 .00013 need 1417 .00056 knee 61 .000024 Now compute likelihood P([ni]|w), then multiply Word P(O|w) P(w) P(O|w)P(w) new .36 .001 .00036 neat .52 .00013 .000068 need .11 .00056 .000062 knee 1.00 .000024 .000024 Why N-grams? Compute likelihood P([ni]|w), then multiply Word P(O|w) P(w) P(O|w)P(w) new .36 .001 .00036 P([ni]|new)P(new) neat .52 .00013 .000068 P([ni]|neat)P(neat) need .11 .00056 .000062 P([ni]|need)P(need) knee 1.00 .000024 .000024 P([ni]|knee)P(knee) Unigram approach: ignores context Need to factor in context (n-gram) - Use P(need|I) instead of just P(need) - Note: P(new|I) < P(need|I) Next Word Prediction [borrowed from J. Hirschberg] From a NY Times story... – Stocks plunged this …. – Stocks plunged this morning, despite a cut in interest rates – Stocks plunged this morning, despite a cut in interest rates by the Federal Reserve, as Wall ... – Stocks plunged this morning, despite a cut in interest rates by the Federal Reserve, as Wall Street began Next Word Prediction (cont) – Stocks plunged this morning, despite a cut in interest rates by the Federal Reserve, as Wall Street began trading for the first time since last … – Stocks plunged this morning, despite a cut in interest rates by the Federal Reserve, as Wall Street began trading for the first time since last Tuesday's terrorist attacks. Human Word Prediction Domain knowledge Syntactic knowledge Lexical knowledge Claim A useful part of the knowledge needed to allow Word Prediction can be captured using simple statistical techniques. Compute: – probability of a sequence – likelihood of words co-occurring Why would we want to do this? Rank the likelihood of sequences containing various alternative alternative hypotheses Assess the likelihood of a hypothesis Why is this useful? Speech recognition Handwriting recognition Spelling correction Machine translation systems Optical character recognizers Handwriting Recognition Assume a note is given to a bank teller, which the teller reads as I have a gub. (cf. Woody Allen) NLP to the rescue …. – gub is not a word – gun, gum, Gus, and gull are words, but gun has a higher probability in the context of a bank Real Word Spelling Errors They are leaving in about fifteen minuets to go to her house. The study was conducted mainly be John Black. The design an construction of the system will take more than a year. Hopefully, all with continue smoothly in my absence. Can they lave him my messages? I need to notified the bank of…. He is trying to fine out. For Spell Checkers Collect list of commonly substituted words – piece/peace, whether/weather, their/there ... Example: “On Tuesday, the whether …’’ “On Tuesday, the weather …” Language Model Definition: Language model is a model that enables one to compute the probability, or likelihood, of a sentence S, P(S). Let’s look at different ways of computing P(S) in the context of Word Prediction Word Prediction: Simple vs. Smart Simple: Every word follows every other word w/ equal probability (0-gram) – Assume |V| is the size of the vocabulary – Likelihood of sentence S of length n is = 1/|V| × 1/|V| … × 1/|V| n times – If English has 100,000 words, probability of each next word is 1/100000 = .00001 Smarter: Probability of each next word is related to word frequency (unigram) – Likelihood of sentence S = P(w1) × P(w2) × … × P(wn) – Assumes probability of each word is independent of probabilities of other words. Even smarter: Look at probability given previous words (N-gram) – Likelihood of sentence S = P(w1) × P(w2|w1) × … × P(wn|wn-1) – Assumes probability of each word is dependent on probabilities of other words. Chain Rule Conditional Probability – P(A1,A2) = P(A1) · P(A2|A1) The Chain Rule generalizes to multiple events – P(A1, …,An) = P(A1) P(A2|A1) P(A3|A1,A2)…P(An|A1…An-1) Examples: – P(the dog) = P(the) P(dog | the) – P(the dog bites) = P(the) P(dog | the) P(bites| the dog) Relative Frequencies and Conditional Probabilities Relative word frequencies are better than equal probabilities for all words – In a corpus with 10K word types, each word would have P(w) = 1/10K – Does not match our intuitions that different words are more likely to occur (e.g. the) Conditional probability more useful than individual relative word frequencies – Dog may be relatively rare in a corpus – But if we see barking, P(dog|barking) may be very large For a Word String In general, the probability of a complete string of words w1…wn is: n P(w1 ) = P(w1)P(w2|w1)P(w3|w1..w2)…P(wn|w1…wn-1) n = P(wk | w1k 1) k 1 But this approach to determining the probability of a word sequence is not very helpful in general…. Markov Assumption How do we compute P(wn|w1n-1)? Trick: Instead of P(rabbit|I saw a), we use P(rabbit|a). – This lets us collect statistics in practice – A bigram model: P(the barking dog) = P(the|<start>)P(barking|the)P(dog|barking) Markov models are the class of probabilistic models that assume that we can predict the probability of some future unit without looking too far into the past n n – Specifically, for N=2 (bigram): P(w1) ≈ Π P(wk|wk-1) k=1 Order of a Markov model: length of prior context – bigram is first order, trigram is second order, … Counting Words in Corpora What is a word? – – – – – e.g., are cat and cats the same word? September and Sept? zero and oh? Is seventy-two one word or two? AT&T? Punctuation? How many words are there in English? Where do we find the things to count? Corpora Corpora are (generally online) collections of text and speech Examples: – – – – – – Brown Corpus (1M words) Wall Street Journal and AP News corpora ATIS, Broadcast News (speech) TDT (text and speech) Switchboard, Call Home (speech) TRAINS, FM Radio (speech) Training and Testing Probabilities come from a training corpus, which is used to design the model. – overly narrow corpus: probabilities don't generalize – overly general corpus: probabilities don't reflect task or domain A separate test corpus is used to evaluate the model, typically using standard metrics – held out test set – cross validation – evaluation differences should be statistically significant Terminology Sentence: unit of written language Utterance: unit of spoken language Word Form: the inflected form that appears in the corpus Lemma: lexical forms having the same stem, part of speech, and word sense Types (V): number of distinct words that might appear in a corpus (vocabulary size) Tokens (N): total number of words in a corpus Types seen so far (T): number of distinct words seen so far in corpus (smaller than V and N) Simple N-Grams An N-gram model uses the previous N-1 words to predict the next one: P(wn | wn-N+1 wn-N+2… wn-1 ) – – – – unigrams: P(dog) bigrams: P(dog | big) trigrams: P(dog | the big) quadrigrams: P(dog | chasing the big) Using N-Grams Recall that – N-gram: P(wn|w1n-1) ≈ P(wn|wn-1 n-N+1) – Bigram: P(wn1) n ≈Π P(wk|wk-1) k=1 For a bigram grammar – P(sentence) can be approximated by multiplying all the bigram probabilities in the sequence Example: P(I want to eat Chinese food) = P(I | <start>) P(want | I) P(to | want) P(eat | to) P(Chinese | eat) P(food | Chinese) A Bigram Grammar Fragment from BERP Eat on .16 Eat Thai .03 Eat some .06 Eat breakfast .03 Eat lunch .06 Eat in .02 Eat dinner .05 Eat Chinese .02 Eat at .04 Eat Mexican .02 Eat a .04 Eat tomorrow .01 Eat Indian .04 Eat dessert .007 Eat today .03 Eat British .001 Additional BERP Grammar <start> I <start> I’d <start> Tell <start> I’m .25 .06 .04 .02 Want some Want Thai To eat To have .04 .01 .26 .14 I want I would I don’t .32 .29 .08 To spend To be British food .09 .02 .60 I have .04 British restaurant .15 Want to Want a .65 .05 British cuisine British lunch .01 .01 Computing Sentence Probability P(I want to eat British food) = P(I|<start>) P(want|I) P(to|want) P(eat|to) P(British|eat) P(food|British) = .25×.32×.65×.26×.001×.60 = .000080 vs. I want to eat Chinese food = .00015 Probabilities seem to capture “syntactic” facts, “world knowledge” – eat is often followed by a NP – British food is not too popular N-gram models can be trained by counting and normalization BERP Bigram Counts I Want To Eat Chinese Food lunch I 8 1087 0 13 0 0 0 Want 3 0 786 0 6 8 6 To 3 0 10 860 3 0 12 Eat 0 0 2 0 19 2 52 Chinese 2 0 0 0 0 120 1 Food 19 0 17 0 0 0 0 Lunch 4 0 0 0 0 1 0 BERP Bigram Probabilities: Use Unigram Count Normalization: divide bigram count by unigram count of first word. I Want To Eat Chinese Food Lunch 3437 1215 3256 938 213 1506 459 Computing the probability of I I – P(I|I) = C(I,I)/C(I) = 8 / 3437 = .0023 A bigram grammar is an NxN matrix of probabilities, where N is the vocabulary size Learning a Bigram Grammar The formula P(wn|wn-1) = C(wn,wn-1)/C(wn-1) is used for bigram “parameter estimation” Relative Frequency Maximum Likelihood Estimation (MLE): Parameter set maximizes likelihood of training set T given model M — P(T|M). What do we learn about the language? What's being captured with ... – – – – – P(want | I) = .32 P(to | want) = .65 P(eat | to) = .26 P(food | Chinese) = .56 P(lunch | eat) = .055 What about... – P(I | I) = .0023 – P(I | want) = .0025 – P(I | food) = .013 Readings for next time J&M Chapter 5, 7.1-7.3