Computer Simulation of a Serial Parsing Model

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Computer Simulation of a Serial Parsing Model. Doan-Nguyen Hai haidoan@cs.concordia.ca CLaC (Computational Linguistics at Concordia) Department of Computer Science Concordia University (Montréal, Canada). Introduction. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Computer Simulation of a Serial Parsing Model

Doan-Nguyen Haihaidoan@cs.concordia.caCLaC (Computational Linguistics at Concordia)Department of Computer ScienceConcordia University (Montréal, Canada)

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Introduction

Question: How about a computer simulation for serial syntactic parsing, which achieves a medium coverage and can deal with some classes of long and difficult sentences?

We implemented such a computer simulation: Based on the garden-path theory (Frazier, 1978;

Frazier & Clifton, 1996) Parsing process is basically incremental and input-

driven (bottom-up), but some top-down mechanisms are also included

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Introduction (2)

Focus on reanalysis Not based on context-free grammars. Using

context extensively. Linguistic knowledge is represented procedurally in Prolog clauses

Considering characteristics of computer to obtain high performance whenever psycholinguistic knowledge is not available

Leaving space for non-structural information in future extension (a human-simulating sentence interpretation program)

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Introduction (3)

Limitations: not yet considered: Lexical ambiguities: words of multiple

categories Conjunctive structures, sentences with

punctuations

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State-of-the-Art

Computational implementations: Marcus 1980: deterministic serial McRoy & Hirst 1990: serial model, no

reanalysis Lombardo 1998: top-down parsing +

selective reanalysis Stevenson 1994: connectionism Crocker & Brants 2000: parallel,

probabilistic

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The Algorithm

Basic loop: incrementalCurrentTree := NIL;while not end of sentence do

InNode := next input word;attach InNode to CurrentTree;

end

How to do attachment ? Where to attach InNode into CurrentTree ?In principle: examine all information from the tree and the input word. Attachment may be costly!

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First refinement: Attachment with Waiting Nodes

A node is waiting for some constituent(s) obligatory: I look for … expected: I am reading …

Incoming element = expected constituent ? Quick checks! I read … the (book) / the (teacher’s book) / good

(books) First refinement:attach(InNode) :- waiting_node(WaitingNode), attach_wait(WaitingNode,

InNode); ... . % more procedures

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More refinements

Two cases: InNode can be attached to CurrentTree:

specific attachment InNode cannot be attached to CurrentTree:

reanalysis

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Specific Attachment attach_spec(InNode) examines specifically the tree

and the input element for an attachment I read it … loudly I went to the theatre of the town... to see (her)

Resolve attachment ambiguities and improve efficiency with psycholinguistic preferences. Classical examples: Late Closure: He said that John came …

yesterday. Minimal Attachment: The boy … found ... PP-attachment: V preferred to N:

I found a bird … in (the garden)

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Reanalysis Reanalysis

I knew the cat in the garden … was (smart) The cat found in the garden … was (smart) I told him the story … was (interesting) Is the girl sitting there … intelligent?

Recent focus in psycholinguistics Frazier & Rayner 1982: Selective Reanalysis. Fodor & Inoue 1994: Diagnosis model: repairing

(not reparsing!) after diagnosis. Fodor & Inoue 1998: Attach Anyway + Adjust Others: Lewis 1998 (NL-Soar), Sturt & Crocker 1996

(Tree Lowering)

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Reanalysis (2)

Reanalysis: symptoms + guesses + verifications + repair The cat found in the garden … was

(smart)symptoms: 'was' has no subject but needs

oneguesses: the potential subject may be now

the object of a verb, or the subject of a clauseverificationsrepair the current tree

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Reanalysis instead of easy attachmentverbs with multiple subcategorizations

I will bring the children … some foodv - 1 object --> v - 2 objects (Not a relative!)

I tell the children … that … I tell the children … she …

v - object --> v - object - clause (Not relative) I want him … to come

v - object --> v - (CP (TP him to (VP come))) (Not a purposive adjunct)

Although there is no breakdown and attachment is possible, reanalysis should be invoked instead!

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Reanalysis instead of easy attachment (2) Hypothesis: When a verb is satisfied by the

incoming element, the parser still remembers its other subcategorizations by registering the verb as a may_wait node.

attach_may_wait(Elt) considers the possibility of reanalysis before doing specific attachment I want him

verb - obj: (VP want (DP him))may_wait(want, other subcats of 'want')

… to comeattach_may_wait reanalyzes the current tree:

(VP want (CP (TP (DP him) to (VP come)))

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Reanalysis instead of easy attachment (3)empty categories

The picturesi you have ei … seen ei is put right after have (Minimal Chain Principle (De

Vincenzi 1991))seen can begin a modifier, cf. The pictures you took

seen from this perspective are very surrealist

Other examples The booki I want ei … to read

Whati do you want ei … to read?

The folderi which I keep ei … my files in

Whati do you see ei … the birds with?

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Reanalysis instead of easy attachment (4) Hypothesis: (Similar to multiple subcategorization verbs)

An object trace node is registered in may_wait state. During parsing, when the top may_wait node is a trace node, attach_may_wait will check whether InNode needs to be attached to the verb, and if yes, move the trace node somewhere else.

The picturesi you have ei ... ei is registered as may_wait When seen arrives, attach_may_wait reanalyzes and

gives:The picturesi you have seen

The parser then looks for a new position for ei

The picturesi you have seen ei

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Reanalysis instead of easy attachment (5)

If the parser cannot find a new position for ei, it hangs it in the memory for future location

The folderi which I keep ei … my files in is blue The folderi which I keep ei …

The folderi which I keep my files -- ei is hung in memory

The folderi which I keep my files in ei -- ei is located

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The algorithm

attach(N) :- waiting_node(W), attach_wait(W, N);

may_wait_node(W), attach_may_wait(W, N); % reanalysis

attach_spec(N);

reanalyze(N). % reanalysis

CurrentTree := NIL;while not end of input do

N := next word;attach N to CurrentTree;

end

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Structure postulation

the boy … who the boy … you

Conform to Frazier 1998: parsing is not purely bottom-up, but also has some top-down features

CPthe boy

DP

who

waiting nodeadjunct

CP

DPi

ei TP

you

waiting node

the boy

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Forward parsing

Examples We need... disk… storage... management... software. I saw the … teacher’s son’s dog.

Reanalysis repeated??? Seems unlikely! I go… to… school / see her. They are… selected… people / by John.

Reanalysis seems not occur in either case Hypothesis: With normal pronouncing rhythm,

reanalysis does not occur here but forward parsing

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Forward parsing (2)

Forward parsing: the parser delays attachment and continues to work with the input stream to gather enough information for a good attachment We need... disk… storage... management...

software.When disk arrives, the parser does not attach it

immediately, but continues parsing forward to get the head of the DP

I go… to… school / see her.When to arrives, the parser continues parsing

forward to know whether it will get a PP or an infinitive VP

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Implementation

Programmed in Prolog (Windows)Coverage: many basic and

'advanced' structures of English. See test examples.

Test: Time complexity:

Theoretical ? Practical: seems good (linear ?)

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Test Results (on 300 sentences)

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500

1000

1500

2000

2500

3000

1 3 5 7 9 11

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15

17

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Average

Min

Max

Length

Time (operations)

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Some test sentences The folder I kept my letters in is blue. Is the girl working in the house your daughter? Is the girl working in the house your daughter bought recently? What exactly do you want to see in this old house? The big white horse raced quickly past the old barn fell behind the house. The girl who I hear they say he thinks John loves is their daughter. To drink with friends that you have not met for a long time is very

interesting. Do you notice the old tall woman who sits looking at your daughter's

little dog has spent a long time here? Are the three little boys in the computer group chosen recently by the

university where your friend is studying computer science intelligent boys?

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The folder I kept my letters in is blue.

'node(4,d:0:[sg,def],0-1,the)

node(2,n:[sg],1-2,folder)

- 'node(7,e:o,?,e(d,node(4,d:0:[sg,def],0-1,the)))

node(5,c:r,?,[])

'node(3,d:p:[sg,p(1)],2-3,i)

node(6,t:[],?,[])

node(8,v:[o,g]:[cj,past0,r(keep)],3-4,kept)

node(13,d:ps:[pl],4-5,my)

node(11,n:[pl],5-6,letters)

-node(12,p:[],6-7,in)

node(15,e:d,?,e(d,node(7,e:o,?, e(d,node(4,d:0:[sg,def],0-1,the)))))

node(16,t:[cj,sg,p(3),pres,sg,def],?,[])

node(14,v:be:[cj,sg,p(3),pres],7-8,is)

node(17,a,8-9,blue)

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DiscussionsFuture work:

Lexical ambiguities: words of multiple categories Conjunctive structures, sentences with

punctuations Incorporating non-structural (semantic, real

world) information: sentence processing. Incorporating other techniques: statistics. Comparing the parser with traditional cfg-based

and statistics-based parsers.

Programming the parser on the computer may help us understand more on the human process.

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Conclusions

A serial parsing prototype has been implemented with some good results

Particularities: Reanalysis instead of easy attachment Forward parsing

Still a lot of things to do

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ReferencesCrocker, M. & Brants, T., 2000. Wide-Coverage Probabilistic Sentence Processing. Journal of

Psycholinguistic Research, Vol. 29, No. 6, 2000.De Vincenzi M., 1991. Syntactic parsing strategies in Italian (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic,

1991).Fodor, J.D. & Ferreira, F., 1998 (eds). Reanalysis in Sentence Processing. Kluwer Academic.Fodor, J.D. & Inoue, A., 1994. The Diagnosis and Cure of Garden Paths. Journal of

Psycholinguistic Research, Vol. 23, No. 5, 1994.Fodor, J.D. & Inoue, A., 1998. Attach Anyway. In Fodor & Ferreira (1998) 101-141.Frazier, L., 1978. On Comprehending Sentences: Syntactic Parsing Strategies. Doctoral

dissertation, University of Connecticut.Frazier, L., 1998. Getting There (Slowly). Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, Vol. 27, No. 2,

1998.Frazier, L. & Clifton, C., 1996. Construal. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Lombardo, V., 1998. A Computational Model of Recovery. In Fodor & Ferreira (1998) 287-325.Marcus, M., 1980. A Theory of Syntactic Recognition for Natural Language. Cambridge, MA:

MIT Press.McRoy, S. & Hirst, G., 1990. Race-based Parsing and Syntactic Disambiguation. Cognitive

Science, 14.Stevenson S., 1998. Parsing as Incremental Restructuring. In Fodor & Ferreira (1998) 327-363.