Abstract

This paper introduces two complementary language modeling approaches for morphologically rich languages aiming to alleviate out-of-vocabulary (OOV) word problem and to exploit morphology as a knowledge source. The first model, morpholexical language model, is a generative $n$ -gram model, where modeling units are lexical-grammatical morphemes instead of commonly used words or statistical sub-words. This paper also proposes a novel approach for integrating the morphology into an automatic speech recognition (ASR) system in the finite-state transducer framework as a knowledge source. We accomplish that by building a morpholexical search network obtained by the composition of lexical transducer of a computational lexicon with a morpholexical language model. The second model is a linear reranking model trained discriminatively with a variant of the perceptron algorithm using morpholexical features. This variant of the perceptron algorithm, WER-sensitive perceptron, is shown to perform better for reranking $n$ -best candidates obtained with the generative model. We apply the proposed models in Turkish broadcast news transcription task and give experimental results. The morpholexical model leads to an elegant morphology-integrated search network with unlimited vocabulary. Thus, it is highly effective in alleviating OOV problem and improves the word error rate (WER) over word and statistical sub-word models by 1.8% and 0.4% absolute, respectively. The discriminatively trained morpholexical model further improves the WER of the system by 0.8% absolute.

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