Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Conference Proceeding (30)
- Part of a Book (7)
- Article (4)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
Has Fulltext
- yes (42)
Keywords
- Korpus <Linguistik> (21)
- Annotation (17)
- Automatische Sprachanalyse (11)
- Deutsch (11)
- Syntaktische Analyse (11)
- Gesprochene Sprache (7)
- Computerlinguistik (5)
- Automatische Sprachverarbeitung (3)
- Frame-Semantik (3)
- Parser (3)
Publicationstate
- Veröffentlichungsversion (42) (remove)
Reviewstate
Publisher
- Association for Computational Linguistics (6)
- The Association for Computational Linguistics (6)
- European Language Resources Association (4)
- Eigenverlag ÖGAI (2)
- European Language Resources Association (ELRA) (2)
- German Society for Computational Linguistics & Language Technology und Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg (2)
- Springer (2)
- ACL (1)
- Austrian academy of sciences (1)
- CSLI Publications (1)
We propose a new type of subword embedding designed to provide more information about unknown compounds, a major source for OOV words in German. We present an extrinsic evaluation where we use the compound embeddings as input to a neural dependency parser and compare the results to the ones obtained with other types of embeddings. Our evaluation shows that adding compound embeddings yields a significant improvement of 2% LAS over using word embeddings when no POS information is available. When adding POS embeddings to the input, however, the effect levels out. This suggests that it is not the missing information about the semantics of the unknown words that causes problems for parsing German, but the lack of morphological information for unknown words. To augment our evaluation, we also test the new embeddings in a language modelling task that requires both syntactic and semantic information.
To improve grammatical function labelling for German, we augment the labelling component of a neural dependency parser with a decision history. We present different ways to encode the history, using different LSTM architectures, and show that our models yield significant improvements, resulting in a LAS for German that is close to the best result from the SPMRL 2014 shared task (without the reranker).