Program equivalence and context-free grammars
Barry K. Rosen
SWAT 1972
We report an empirical study of n-gram posterior probability confidence measures for statistical machine translation (SMT). We first describe an efficient and practical algorithm for rapidly computing n-gram posterior probabilities from large translation word lattices. These probabilities are shown to be a good predictor of whether or not the n-gram is found in human reference translations, motivating their use as a confidence measure for SMT. Comprehensive n-gram precision and word coverage measurements are presented for a variety of different language pairs, domains and conditions. We analyze the effect on reference precision of using single or multiple references, and compare the precision of posteriors computed from k-best lists to those computed over the full evidence space of the lattice. We also demonstrate improved confidence by combining multiple lattices in a multi-source translation framework. © 2012 The Author(s).
Barry K. Rosen
SWAT 1972
Khalid Abdulla, Andrew Wirth, et al.
ICIAfS 2014
Amarachi Blessing Mbakwe, Joy Wu, et al.
NeurIPS 2023
P.C. Yue, C.K. Wong
Journal of the ACM