Improvements of Katz K Mixture Model
スポンサーリンク
概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
A simpler distribution that fits empirical word distribution about as well as a negative binomial is the Katz K mixture.In the K mixture model, the basic assumption is that the conditional probabilities of repeats for a given word are determined by a constant decay factor that is independent of the number of occurrences which have taken place.However, the probabilities of the repeat occurrences are generally lower than the constant decay factor for the content-bearing words with few occurrences that have taken place.To solve this deficiency of the K mixture model, in-depth exploration of the characteristics of the conditional probabilities of repetitions, decay factors and their influences on modeling term distributions was conducted.Based on the results of this study, it appears that both ends of the distribution can be used to fit models.That is, not only can document frequencies be used when the instances of a word are few, but also tail probabilities (the accumulation of document frequencies). Both document frequencies for few instances of a word and tail probabilities for large instances are often relatively easy to estimate empirically.Therefore, we propose an effective approach for improving the K mixture model, where the decay factor is the combination of two possible decay factors interpolated by a function depending on the number of instances of a word in a document.Results show that the proposed model can generate a statistically significant better estimation of frequencies, especially the frequency estimation for a word with two instances in a document.In addition, it is shown that the advantages of this approach will become more evident in two cases, modeling the term distribution for the frequently used content-bearing word and modeling the term distribution for a corpus with a wide range of document length.
- 言語処理学会の論文
言語処理学会 | 論文
- 複合語の分野連想語の効率的決定法
- クラス指向事例収集手法による言い換えコーパスの構築
- 動詞項構造辞書への大規模用例付与
- 言い換え技術に関する研究動向
- Morpho-Syntactic Rules for Detecting Japanese Term Variation: Establishment and Evaluation