| J.M. Vilar, A. Castellanos, J.M. Jimemez, J.A. Sanchez, E. Vidal, J. Oncina, and H. Rulot. Spoken-language machine translation in limited domains: can it be achieved by finite-state models ? In Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Theoretical and Methodological Issues in Machine Translation. Leuven, Belgium, 1995. |
....recursive head transduction. Unlike standard finite state transducers, translations of words in the input and output strings can be arbitrarily far apart without a corresponding increase in the number of model states. This is not possible for translation using standard transducers (for example, [8]) A translator using head transducers consists of the following components: # a collection of head transducers; # a bilingual lexicon associating pairings of words (or phrases) from the two languages with particular head transducers; # a parameter table specifying costs (typically negated log ....
J.M. Vilar, A. Castellanos, J.M. Jimemez, J.A. Sanchez, E. Vidal, J. Oncina, and H. Rulot. Spoken-language machine translation in limited domains: can it be achieved by finite-state models ? In Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Theoretical and Methodological Issues in Machine Translation. Leuven, Belgium, 1995.
Online articles have much greater impact More about CiteSeer.IST Add search form to your site Submit documents Feedback
CiteSeer.IST - Copyright Penn State and NEC