Pavel Kisilev, Daniel Freedman, et al.
ICPR 2012
Stochastic context-free grammars (SCFGs) have long been recognized as useful for a large variety of tasks including natural language processing, morphological parsing, speech recognition, information extraction, Web-page wrapping and even analysis of RNA. A string and an SCFG jointly represent a probabilistic interpretation of the meaning of the string, in the form of a (possibly infinite) probability space of parse trees. The problem of evaluating a query over this probability space is considered under the conventional semantics of querying a probabilistic database. For general SCFGs, extremely simple queries may have results that include irrational probabilities. But, for a large subclass of SCFGs (that includes all the standard studied subclasses of SCFGs) and the language of tree-pattern queries with projection (and child/descendant edges), it is shown that query results have rational probabilities with a polynomial-size bit representation and, more importantly, an efficient query-evaluation algorithm is presented. © 2010 ACM.
Pavel Kisilev, Daniel Freedman, et al.
ICPR 2012
Michelle X. Zhou, Fei Wang, et al.
ICMEW 2013
Sudeep Sarkar, Kim L. Boyer
Computer Vision and Image Understanding
James E. Gentile, Nalini Ratha, et al.
BTAS 2009