There are many situations where one must work with sequences. Here is a simple, and classical, example. We see a sequence of words, but the last word is missing. I will use the sequence “I had a glass of red wine with my grilled xxxx”. What is the best guess for the missing word? You could obtain one possible answer by counting word frequencies, then replacing the missing word with the most common word. This is “the”, which is not a particularly good guess because it doesn’t fit with the previous word. Instead, you could find the most common pair of words matching “grilled xxxx”, and then choose the second word. If you do this experiment (I used Google Ngram viewer, and searched for “grilled *”), you will find mostly quite sensible suggestions (I got “meats”, “meat”, “fish”, “chicken”, in that order). If you want to produce random sequences of words, the next word should depend on some of the words you have already produced.
CITATION STYLE
Forsyth, D. (2018). Markov Chains and Hidden Markov Models. In Probability and Statistics for Computer Science (pp. 331–351). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-64410-3_14
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.