Hiroshi Ichikawa


2014

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A joint inference of deep case analysis and zero subject generation for Japanese-to-English statistical machine translation
Taku Kudo | Hiroshi Ichikawa | Hideto Kazawa
Proceedings of the 52nd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 2: Short Papers)

2011

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A Lightweight Evaluation Framework for Machine Translation Reordering
David Talbot | Hideto Kazawa | Hiroshi Ichikawa | Jason Katz-Brown | Masakazu Seno | Franz Och
Proceedings of the Sixth Workshop on Statistical Machine Translation

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Training a Parser for Machine Translation Reordering
Jason Katz-Brown | Slav Petrov | Ryan McDonald | Franz Och | David Talbot | Hiroshi Ichikawa | Masakazu Seno | Hideto Kazawa
Proceedings of the 2011 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing

2006

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Efficient Sentence Retrieval Based on Syntactic Structure
Hiroshi Ichikawa | Keita Hakoda | Taiichi Hashimoto | Takenobu Tokunaga
Proceedings of the COLING/ACL 2006 Main Conference Poster Sessions

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A new approach to syntactic annotation
Masaki Noguchi | Hiroshi Ichikawa | Taiichi Hashimoto | Takenobu Tokunaga
Proceedings of the Fifth International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC’06)

Many systems have been developed for creating syntactically annotated corpora. However, they mainly focus on interface usability and hardly pay attention toknowledge sharing among annotators in the task. In order to incorporate the functionality of knowledge sharing, we emphasized the importance of normalizingthe annotation process. As a first step toward knowledge sharing, this paper proposes a method of system initiative annotation in which the system suggests annotators the order of ambiguities to solve. To be more concrete, the system forces annotators to solve ambiguity of constituent structure in a top-down and depth-first manner, and then to solve ambiguity of grammatical category in a bottom-up and breadth-first manner. We implemented the system on top of eBonsai, our annotation tool, and conducted experiments to compare eBonsai and the proposed system in terms of annotation accuracy and efficiency. We found that at least for novice annotators, the proposed system is more efficient while keeping annotation accuracy comparable with eBonsai.

2005

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eBonsai: An Integrated Environment for Annotating Treebanks
Hiroshi Ichikawa | Masaki Noguchi | Taiichi Hashimoto | Takenobu Tokunaga | Hozumi Tanaka
Companion Volume to the Proceedings of Conference including Posters/Demos and tutorial abstracts