Combining Discrete and Neural Features for Sequence Labeling

August 24, 2017 ยท Declared Dead ยท ๐Ÿ› Conference on Intelligent Text Processing and Computational Linguistics

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Authors Jie Yang, Zhiyang Teng, Meishan Zhang, Yue Zhang arXiv ID 1708.07279 Category cs.CL: Computation & Language Citations 72 Venue Conference on Intelligent Text Processing and Computational Linguistics Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
Neural network models have recently received heated research attention in the natural language processing community. Compared with traditional models with discrete features, neural models have two main advantages. First, they take low-dimensional, real-valued embedding vectors as inputs, which can be trained over large raw data, thereby addressing the issue of feature sparsity in discrete models. Second, deep neural networks can be used to automatically combine input features, and including non-local features that capture semantic patterns that cannot be expressed using discrete indicator features. As a result, neural network models have achieved competitive accuracies compared with the best discrete models for a range of NLP tasks. On the other hand, manual feature templates have been carefully investigated for most NLP tasks over decades and typically cover the most useful indicator pattern for solving the problems. Such information can be complementary the features automatically induced from neural networks, and therefore combining discrete and neural features can potentially lead to better accuracy compared with models that leverage discrete or neural features only. In this paper, we systematically investigate the effect of discrete and neural feature combination for a range of fundamental NLP tasks based on sequence labeling, including word segmentation, POS tagging and named entity recognition for Chinese and English, respectively. Our results on standard benchmarks show that state-of-the-art neural models can give accuracies comparable to the best discrete models in the literature for most tasks and combing discrete and neural features unanimously yield better results.
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