Papers for Relevance Assessment by Brian Roark

Research Question: How can one get the benefit of syntactic generalization within a discriminative language modeling paradigm?

Paper ID
(Link to PDF)

Title

Author(s)

E89-1008

PARADIGMATIC MORPHOLOGY

Jonathan Calder

W02-1032

Exploiting Headword Dependency and Predictive Clustering for Language Modeling

Jianfeng Gao; Hisami Suzuki; Yang Wen

huang-cox-hlt-naacl-2004

Automatic Call Routing with Multiple Language Models

Qiang Huang and Stephen Cox

J99-3003

Vector-based Natural Language Call Routing

Jennifer Chu-Carroll; Bob Carpenter

C92-1014

A High-level Morphological Description Language Exploiting Inflectional Paradigms

Peter Anick; Suzanne Artemieff

W98-1008

Paradigmatic Treatment of Arabic Morphology

Martine Smets

N01-1029

A Structured Language Model Based on Context-Sensitive Probabilistic Left-Corner Parsing

Dong Hoon Van Uytsel; Filip Van Aelten; Dirk Van Compernolle

P98-1028

Beyond N -Grams: Can Linguistic Sophistication Improve Language Modeling?

Eric Brill; Radu Florian; John C. Henderson; Lidia Mangu

C00-1009

COMBINATION OF N-GRAMS AND STOCHASTIC CONTEXT-FREE GRAMMARS FOR LANGUAGE MODELING

Jose-Miguel Benedi; Joan-Andreu Sanchez

W98-1101

Bayesian Stratified Sampling to Assess Corpus Utility

Judith Hochberg; Clint Scovel; Timothy Thomas; Sam Hall

P98-1040

Dialogue Management in Vector-Based Call Routing

Jennifer Chu-Carroll; Bob Carpenter

P97-1064

A Structured Language Model

Ciprian Chelba

121_Paper

Discriminative Reranking for Machine Translation

Libin Shen, Anoop Sarkar and Franz Josef Och

P03-1066

Unsupervised Learning of Dependency Structure for Language Modeling

Jianfeng Gao; Hisami Suzuki

J95-3002

Robust Learning, Smoothing, and Parameter Tying on Syntactic Ambiguity Resolution

Tung-Hui Chiang; Keh-Yih Su; Yi-Chung Lin