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New algorithm for learning languages

Cornell University and Tel Aviv University researchers have developed a method for enabling a computer program to scan text in any of a number of languages, including English and Chinese, and autonomously and without previous information infer the underlying rules of grammar. The rules can then be used to generate new and meaningful sentences. The method also works for such data as sheet music or protein sequences.

The development -- which has a patent pending -- has implications for speech recognition and for other applications in natural language engineering, as well as for genomics and proteomics. It also offers new insights into language acquisition and psycholinguistics.

"The algorithm -- the computational method -- for language learning and processing that we have developed can take a body of text, abstract from it a collection of recurring patterns or rules and then generate new material," explained Shimon Edelman, a computer scientist who is a professor of psychology at Cornell and co-author of a new paper, "Unsupervised Learning of Natural Languages," published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS, Vol. 102, No. 33).

"This is the first time an unsupervised algorithm is shown capable of learning complex syntax, generating grammatical new sentences and proving useful in other fields that call for structure discovery from raw data, such as bioinformatics," he said.

Unlike previous attempts at developing computer algorithms for language learning, the new method, called Automatic Distillation of Structure (ADIOS), successfully identifies complex patterns in raw texts. The algorithm discovers the patterns by repeatedly aligning sentences and looking for overlapping parts.

For example, the sentences I would like to book a first-class flight to Chicago, I want to book a first-class flight to Boston and Book a first-class flight for me, please may give rise to the pattern book a first-class flight -- if this candidate pattern passes the novel statistical significance test that is the core of the algorithm.

If the system also encounters the sentences I need to book a direct flight from New York to Tel Aviv andI would like to book an economy flight , it may infer that the phrases first-class, direct and economy are equivalent in the context of the new pattern. "Because such equivalence sets can contain other patterns -- in turn containing further patterns, and so on -- the resulting body of knowledge grows recursively, as a sort of forest of branching trees of possibilities," said Edelman.

He added, "ADIOS relies on a statistical method for pattern extraction and on structured generalization -- two processes that have been implicated in language acquisition. Our experiments show that it can acquire intricate structures from raw data, including transcripts of parents' speech directed at 2- or 3-year-olds. This may eventually help researchers understand how children, who learn language in a similar item-by-item fashion and with very little supervision, eventually master the full complexities of their native tongue."

In addition to child-directed language, the algorithm has been tested on the full text of the Bible in several languages, on artificial context-free languages with thousands of rules and on musical notation. It also has been applied to biological data, such as nucleotide base pairs and amino acid sequences. In analyzing proteins, for example, the algorithm was able to extract from amino acid sequences patterns that were highly correlated with the functional properties of the proteins.

The new method was developed jointly with David Horn and Eytan Ruppin, professors of physics and computer science, respectively, at Tel Aviv University, and with Zach Solan, a doctoral student there and the lead author on the paper. Their collaboration with Edelman was supported in part by the U.S.-Israel Binational Science Foundation.

From Cornell University

August 31, 2005

Comments

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June 24, 2009 by Anonymous, 1 week 2 days ago
Comment id: 37522

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June 21, 2009 by Anonymous, 1 week 5 days ago
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Wow, thats interesting how the same technique applied to language patterns can be applied to biological data and extract important sequences there. I'd like to see some samples of what the algorithm generated.
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May 11, 2009 by Anonymous, 7 weeks 4 days ago
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The method also works for such data as sheet music or protein sequences.

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I heard about that algorithm too.

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It's an old idea (if I don't

December 5, 2008 by Anonymous, 30 weeks 11 hours ago
Comment id: 33217

It's an old idea (if I don't miss something). If you are interested in this topic use Google and search for "Markov chains". Spammers generate "like-real" tests using this algorithm. And yes, it also can be applied to test texts.

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November 11, 2008 by Anonymous, 33 weeks 3 days ago
Comment id: 32800

For example, the sentences I would like to book a first-class flight to Chicago, I want to book a first-class flight to Boston and Book a first-class flight for me, please may give rise to the pattern book a first-class flight -- if this candidate pattern passes the novel statistical significance test that is the core of the algorithm.:)

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there is always the problem

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Comment id: 30977

there is always the problem of 'how much is too much'? as you said it is applied on extensive and recurring raw data. where do you get this data from? i don't really care, but what about the validity of the data? in order to get a correct algorithm you need correct data.

Strict pattern-based methods

May 25, 2008 by Anonymous, 1 year 5 weeks ago
Comment id: 30104

Strict pattern-based methods of grammar induction are often frustrated by the apparently inexhaustible variety of novel word combinations in large corpora. Statistical methods offer a possible solution by allowing frequent well-formed expressions to overwhelm the infrequent ungrammatical ones. They also have the desirable property of being able to construct robust grammars from positive instances alone. Unfortunately, the zero-frequency problem entails assigning a small probability to all possible word patterns, thus ungrammatical n-grams become as probable as unseen grammatical ones. Further, such grammars are unable to take advantage of inherent lexical properties that should allow infrequent words to inherit the syntactic properties of the class to which they belong.

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I study Applied Linguistics in my university, Computational and other lingustics. My purpose is to

Well this is interesting

January 29, 2006 by webmaster@fellowmate.com (not verified), 3 years 22 weeks ago
Comment id: 1335

Well this is interesting I imagine the algorithm is in some version of C+ or something. There was once three or four competing lists of rules for English syntax, about 33 or so, so this is a good thing for computers to do, so to speak, sort of a real-time syntactical concordance analyses.

Syntax

September 3, 2005 by georgejmyersjr, 3 years 43 weeks ago
Comment id: 1142

I once studied syntax and transformational grammar at Stony Brook University, along with other linguistic classes for Anthropology and find this an interesting development. When computer languages got started there was one SNOBOL which processed language, instead of numbers, which I thought might some day be developed, why even Bill Gates once promised a SNOBOL for Windows. (Where is it Mr. Gates?) Well this is interesting I imagine the algorithm is in some version of C+ or something. There was once three or four competing lists of rules for English syntax, about 33 or so, so this is a good thing for computers to do, so to speak, sort of a real-time syntactical concordance analyses. Bravo!

George J Myers, Jr. (my first post here, I'm awed)

I need a French/English

September 1, 2005 by trisha4, 3 years 43 weeks ago
Comment id: 1138

I need a French/English version now please...before it's too late.

or even better, a spam

September 1, 2005 by antifraudster, 3 years 43 weeks ago
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or even better, a spam generator!

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spam?

August 31, 2005 by pyropunk, 3 years 43 weeks ago
Comment id: 1133

Since spam often consists of randomly generated sentences could this algorithm be used as a spam filter?

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