Nathaniel W. Filardo
2012
Modality and Negation in SIMT Use of Modality and Negation in Semantically-Informed Syntactic MT
Kathryn Baker
|
Michael Bloodgood
|
Bonnie J. Dorr
|
Chris Callison-Burch
|
Nathaniel W. Filardo
|
Christine Piatko
|
Lori Levin
|
Scott Miller
Computational Linguistics, Volume 38, Issue 2 - June 2012
2010
A Modality Lexicon and its use in Automatic Tagging
Kathryn Baker
|
Michael Bloodgood
|
Bonnie Dorr
|
Nathaniel W. Filardo
|
Lori Levin
|
Christine Piatko
Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC'10)
This paper describes our resource-building results for an eight-week JHU Human Language Technology Center of Excellence Summer Camp for Applied Language Exploration (SCALE-2009) on Semantically-Informed Machine Translation. Specifically, we describe the construction of a modality annotation scheme, a modality lexicon, and two automated modality taggers that were built using the lexicon and annotation scheme. Our annotation scheme is based on identifying three components of modality: a trigger, a target and a holder. We describe how our modality lexicon was produced semi-automatically, expanding from an initial hand-selected list of modality trigger words and phrases. The resulting expanded modality lexicon is being made publicly available. We demonstrate that one tagger―a structure-based tagger―results in precision around 86% (depending on genre) for tagging of a standard LDC data set. In a machine translation application, using the structure-based tagger to annotate English modalities on an English-Urdu training corpus improved the translation quality score for Urdu by 0.3 Bleu points in the face of sparse training data.
Search
Co-authors
- Kathryn Baker 2
- Michael Bloodgood 2
- Bonnie Dorr 2
- Christine Piatko 2
- Lori Levin 2
- show all...