Weighted and probabilistic context-free grammars are equally expressive

被引:21
作者
Smith, Noah A. [1 ]
Johnson, Mark [2 ]
机构
[1] Carnegie Mellon Univ, Sch Comp Sci, Pittsburgh, PA 15217 USA
[2] Brown Univ, Dept Cognit & Linguist Sci, Providence, RI 02912 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1162/coli.2007.33.4.477
中图分类号
TP18 [人工智能理论];
学科分类号
081104 ; 0812 ; 0835 ; 1405 ;
摘要
This article studies the relationship between weighted context-free grammars (WCFGs), where each production is associated with a positive real-valued weight, and probabilistic context-free grammars (PCFGs), where the weights of the productions associated with a nonterminal are constrained to sum to one. Because the class of WCFGs properly includes the PCFGs, one might expect that WCFGs can describe distributions that PCFGs cannot. However, Z. Chi (1999, Computational Linguistics, 25(l):131-160) and S. R Abney, D. A. McAllester, and R. Pereira (1999, In Proceedings of the 37th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics, pages 542-549, College Park, MD) proved that every WCFG distribution is equivalent to some PCFG distribution. We extend their results to conditional distributions, and show that every WCFG conditional distribution of parses given strings is also the conditional distribution defined by some PCFG, even when the WCFGs partition function diverges. This shows that any parsing or labeling accuracy improvement from conditional estimation of WCFGs or conditional random fields (CRFs) over joint estimation of PCFGs or hidden Markov models (HMMs) is due to the estimation procedure rather than the change in model class, because PCFGs and HMMs are exactly as expressive as WCFGs and chain-structured CRFs, respectively.
引用
收藏
页码:477 / 491
页数:15
相关论文
共 21 条
[11]   Equivalence of linear Boltzmann chains and hidden Markov models [J].
MacKay, DJC .
NEURAL COMPUTATION, 1996, 8 (01) :178-181
[12]  
McCallum A., 2000, P 17 INT C MACH LEAR, P591
[13]   A METHOD FOR SYNTHESIZING SEQUENTIAL CIRCUITS [J].
MEALY, GH .
BELL SYSTEM TECHNICAL JOURNAL, 1955, 34 (05) :1045-1079
[14]  
Moore EF., 1956, AUTOMATA STUDIES, V34, P129, DOI DOI 10.1515/9781400882618-006
[15]  
NEDERHOF MJ, 2004, P 42 ANN M ASS COMP, P543
[16]  
Ratnaparkhi A., 1994, ICSLP 94. 1994 International Conference on Spoken Language Processing, P803
[17]  
Smith Noah A, 2005, P 43 ANN M ASS COMP
[18]  
STOLCKE A, 1995, COMPUT LINGUIST, V21, P165
[19]  
Taskar Ben, 2004, P EMNLP, P1
[20]  
Vardi I., 1991, COMPUTATIONAL RECREA