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Learning with hidden structure in Optimality Theory and Harmonic Grammar: beyond Robust Interpretive Parsing*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2013
Abstract
This paper explores the relative merits of constraint ranking vs. weighting in the context of a major outstanding learnability problem in phonology: learning in the face of hidden structure. Specifically, the paper examines a well-known approach to the structural ambiguity problem, Robust Interpretive Parsing (RIP; Tesar & Smolensky 1998), focusing on its stochastic extension first described by Boersma (2003). Two related problems with the stochastic formulation of RIP are revealed, rooted in a failure to take full advantage of probabilistic information available in the learner's grammar. To address these problems, two novel parsing strategies are introduced and applied to learning algorithms for both probabilistic ranking and weighting. The novel parsing strategies yield significant improvements in performance, asymmetrically improving performance of OT learners. Once RIP is replaced with the proposed modifications, the apparent advantage of HG over OT learners reported in previous work disappears (Boersma & Pater 2008).
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2013
Footnotes
This work has benefited from discussion with a number of colleagues, including Joe Pater, Paul Boersma, Paul Smolensky, Colin Wilson, Jason Riggle, John McCarthy, Bob Frank and Jeff Heinz. I have also received valuable comments on portions of this work presented to audiences at NECPhon, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Mayfest, the University of Delaware Workshop on Stress and Accent, and the Yale Computational Linguistics research group (CLAY). Finally, I would also like to thank three anonymous reviewers and the associate editor for very thorough and thoughtful comments on an earlier version of this paper.
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