Abstract

There is significant lexical difference—words and usage of words-between spontaneous/colloquial language and the written language. This difference affects the performance of spoken language recognition systems that use statistical language models or context-free-grammars because these models are based on the written language rather than the spoken form. There are many filler phrases and colloquial phrases that appear solely or more often in spontaneous and colloquial speech. Chinese languages perhaps exemplify such a difference as many colloquial forms of the language, such as Cantonese, exist strictly in spoken forms and are different from the written standard Chinese, which is based on Mandarin. A conventional way of dealing with this issue is to add colloquial terms manually to the lexicon. However, this is time-consuming and expensive. Meanwhile, supervised learning requires manual tagging of large corpuses, which is also time-consuming. We propose an unsupervised learning method to find colloquial terms and classify filler and content phrases in spontaneous and colloquial Chinese, including Cantonese. We propose using frequency strength, and spread measures of character pairs and groups to extract automatically frequent, out-of-vocabulary colloquial terms to add to a standard Chinese lexicon. An unsegmented, and unannotated corpus is segmented with the augmented lexicon. We then propose a Markov classifier to classify Chinese characters into either content or filler phrases in an iterative training method. This method is task-independent and can extract even mixed language terms. We show the effectiveness of our method by both a natural language query processing task and an adaptive Cantonese language-modeling task. The precision for content phrase extraction and classification is around 80%, with a recall of 99%, and the precision for filler phrase extraction and classification is around 99.5% with a recall of approximately 89%. The web search precision using these extracted content words is comparable to that of the search results with content phrases selected by humans. We adapt a language model trained from written texts with the Hong Kong Newsgroup corpus. It outperforms both the standard Chinese language model and also the Cantonese language model. It also performs better than the language model trained a simply by concatenating two sets of standard and colloquial texts.

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