Incorporating Source-Side Phrase Structures into Neural Machine Translation

  • Eriguchi A
  • Hashimoto K
  • Tsuruoka Y
N/ACitations
Citations of this article
63Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Neural machine translation (NMT) has shown great success as a new alternative to the traditional Statistical Machine Translation model in multiple languages. Early NMT models are based on sequence-to-sequence learning that encodes a sequence of source words into a vector space and generates another sequence of target words from the vector. In those NMT models, sentences are simply treated as sequences of words without any internal structure. In this article, we focus on the role of the syntactic structure of source sentences and propose a novel end-to-end syntactic NMT model, which we call a tree-to-sequence NMT model, extending a sequence-to-sequence model with the source-side phrase structure. Our proposed model has an attention mechanism that enables the decoder to generate a translated word while softly aligning it with phrases as well as words of the source sentence. We have empirically compared the proposed model with sequence-to-sequence models in various settings on Chinese-to-Japanese and English-to-Japanese translation tasks. Our experimental results suggest that the use of syntactic structure can be beneficial when the training data set is small, but is not as effective as using a bi-directional encoder. As the size of training data set increases, the benefits of using a syntactic tree tends to diminish.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Eriguchi, A., Hashimoto, K., & Tsuruoka, Y. (2019). Incorporating Source-Side Phrase Structures into Neural Machine Translation. Computational Linguistics, 45(2), 267–292. https://doi.org/10.1162/coli_a_00348

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free