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Fluency Constraints for Minimum Bayes-Risk Decoding of Statistical Machine Translation Lattices
"... A novel and robust approach to improving statistical machine translation fluency is developed within a minimum Bayesrisk decoding framework. By segmenting translation lattices according to confidence measures over the maximum likelihood translation hypothesis we are able to focus on regions with pot ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 3 (2 self)
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A novel and robust approach to improving statistical machine translation fluency is developed within a minimum Bayesrisk decoding framework. By segmenting translation lattices according to confidence measures over the maximum likelihood translation hypothesis we are able to focus on regions with potential translation errors. Hypothesis space constraints based on monolingual coverage are applied to the low confidence regions to improve overall translation fluency. 1
Lattice Rescoring Methods for Statistical Machine Translation
"... This dissertation is the result of my own work and includes nothing which is the outcome of work done in collaboration except where specifically indicated in the text. It has not been submitted in whole or in part for a degree at any other university. Some of the work has been published previously i ..."
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This dissertation is the result of my own work and includes nothing which is the outcome of work done in collaboration except where specifically indicated in the text. It has not been submitted in whole or in part for a degree at any other university. Some of the work has been published previously in conference proceedings (Blackwood et al., 2008a; Blackwood
Hierarchical Phrase-based Translation Grammars Extracted from Alignment Posterior Probabilities
"... We report on investigations into hierarchical phrase-based translation grammars based on rules extracted from posterior distributions over alignments of the parallel text. Rather than restrict rule extraction to a single alignment, such as Viterbi, we instead extract rules based on posterior distrib ..."
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We report on investigations into hierarchical phrase-based translation grammars based on rules extracted from posterior distributions over alignments of the parallel text. Rather than restrict rule extraction to a single alignment, such as Viterbi, we instead extract rules based on posterior distributions provided by the HMM word-to-word alignment model. We define translation grammars progressively by adding classes of rules to a basic phrase-based system. We assess these grammars in terms of their expressive power, measured by their ability to align the parallel text from which their rules are extracted, and the quality of the translations they yield. In Chinese-to-English translation, we find that rule extraction from posteriors gives translation improvements. We also find that grammars with rules with only one nonterminal, when extracted from posteriors, can outperform more complex grammars extracted from Viterbi alignments. Finally, we show that the best way to exploit source-totarget and target-to-source alignment models is to build two separate systems and combine their output translation lattices. 1

