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1 Understanding Natural Language 14 14.0The Natural Language Understanding Problem 14.1Deconstructing Language: A Symbolic Analysis 14.2Syntax 14.3Syntax.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Understanding Natural Language 14 14.0The Natural Language Understanding Problem 14.1Deconstructing Language: A Symbolic Analysis 14.2Syntax 14.3Syntax."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Understanding Natural Language 14 14.0The Natural Language Understanding Problem 14.1Deconstructing Language: A Symbolic Analysis 14.2Syntax 14.3Syntax and Knowledge with ATN parsers 14.4Stochastic Tools for Language Analysis 14.5Natural Language Applications 14.6Epilogue and References 14.7Exercises Additional source used in preparing the slides: Patrick H. Winston’s AI textbook, Addison Wesley, 1993.

2 2 Chapter objective Give a brief introduction to deterministic techniques used in understanding natural language

3 3 An early natural language understanding system: SHRDLU (Winograd, 1972)

4 4 It could converse about a blocks world What is sitting on the red block? What shape is the blue block on the table? Place the green cylinder on the red brick. What color is the block on the red block? Shape?

5 5 The problems Understanding language is not merely understanding the words: it requires inference about the speaker’s goals, knowledge, assumptions. The context of interaction is also important.  Do you know where Rekhi 309 is?  Yes.  Good, then please go there and pick up the documents.  Do you know where Rekhi 309 is?  Yes, go up the stairs and enter the semi-circular section.  Thank you.

6 6 The problems (cont’d) Implementing a natural language understanding program requires that we represent knowledge and expectations of the domain and reason effectively about them.  nonmonotonicity  belief revision  metaphor  planning  learning  … Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day? Thou art more lovely and more temperate: Rough winds do not shake the darling buds of May, And summer’s lease hath all too short a date: Shakespeare’s Sonnet XVIII

7 7 The problems (cont’d) There are three major issues involved in understanding natural language:  A large amount of human knowledge is assumed.  Language is pattern based. Phoneme, word, and sentence orders are not random.  Language acts are products of agents embedded in complex environments.

8 8 SHRDLU’s solution Restrict focus to a microworld : blocks world Constrain the language: use templates Do not deal with problems involving commonsense reasoning: still can communicate meaningfully

9 9 Linguists’ approach Prosody: rhythm and intonation of language Phonology: sounds that are combined Morphology: morphemes that make up words Syntax: rules for legal phrases and sentences Semantics: meaning of words, phrases, sentences Pragmatics: effects on the listener World knowledge: background knowledge of the physical world

10 10 Stages of language analysis 1. Parsing: analyze the syntactic structure of a sentence 2. Semantic interpretation: analyze the meaning of a sentence 3. Contextual/world knowledge representation: Analyze the expanded meaning of a sentence For instance, consider the sentence: Tarzan kissed Jane.

11 11 The result of parsing would be:

12 12 The result of semantic interpretation

13 13 The result of contextual/world knowledge interpretation

14 14 Can also represent questions: Who loves Jane?

15 15 Parsing using Context-Free Grammars A bunch of rewrite rules: 1. sentence  noun_phrase verb_phrase 2. noun_phrase  noun 3. noun_phrase  article noun 4. verb_phrase  verb 5. verb_phrase  verb noun_phrase 6. article  a 7. article  the 8. noun  man 9. noun  dog 10. verb  likes 11. verb  bites these are the terminals these are the symbols of the grammar these are the nonterminals

16 16 Parsing It is the search for a legal derivation of the sentence. sentence  noun_phrase verb_phrase  article noun verb_phrase  The noun verb_phrase  The man verb_phrase  The man verb noun_phrase  The man bites noun_phrase  The man bites article noun  The man bites the noun  The man bites the dog Each intermediate form is a sentential form.

17 17 Parsing (cont’d) The result is a parse tree. A parse tree is a structure where each node is a symbol from the grammar. The root node is the starting nonterminal, the intermediate nodes are nonterminals, the leaf nodes are terminals. “Sentence” is the starting nonterminal. There are two classes of parsing algorithms  top-down parsers: start with the starting symbol and try to derive the complete sentence  bottom-up parsers: start with the complete sentence and attempt to find a series of reductions to derive the start symbol

18 18 The parse tree

19 19 Parsing is a search problem Search for the correct derivation If a wrong choice is made, the parser needs to backtrack Recursive descent parsers maintain backtrack pointers Look-ahead techniques help determine the proper rule to apply We’ll study transition network parsers (and augmented transition networks)

20 20 Transition networks

21 21 Transition networks (cont’d) It is a set of finite-state machines representing the rules in the grammar Each network corresponds to a single nonterminal Arcs are labeled with either terminal or nonterminal symbols Each path from the start state to the final state corresponds to a rule for that nonterminal If there is more than one rule for a nonterminal there are multiple paths from the start to the goal (e.g., noun_phrase)

22 22 The main idea Finding a successful transition through the network corresponds to replacement of the nonterminal with the RHS Parsing a sentence is a matter of traversing the network:  If the label of the transition (arc) is a terminal, it must match the input, and the input pointer advances  If the label of the transition (arc) is a nonterminal, the corresponding transition network is invoked recursively  If several alternative paths are possible, each must be tried (backtracking)---very much like nondeterministic finite automaton---until a successful path is found

23 23 Parsing the sentence “Dog bites.”

24 24 Notes A “successful parse” is the complete traversal of the net for the starting nonterminal from s initial to s final. If no path works, the parse “fails.” It is not a valid sentence (or part of sentence). The following algorithm would be called using parse(s initial ) It would start with the net for “sentence.”

25 25 The algorithm Function parse(grammar_symbol); begin save pointer to current location in input stream; case grammar_symbol is a terminal; if grammar_symbol matches the next word in the input stream then return(success) else begin reset input stream return(failure) end;

26 26 The algorithm (cont’d) … case … … grammar_symbol is a nonterminal; begin retrieve the transition network labeled by grammar_symbol state := start state of network; if transition(state) returns success then return(success) else begin reset input stream; return (failure) end end end.

27 27 The algorithm (cont’d) Function transition(current_state); begin case current_state is a final state: return (success) current_state is not a final state: while there are unexamined transitions out of current_state do begin grammar_symbol := the label on the next unexamined transition if parse(grammar_symbol) returns (success) then begin next_state := state at the end of the transition; if transition(next_state) returns (success); then return(success) end end return(failure) end end.

28 28 Modifications to return the parse tree 1. Each time the function parse is called with a terminal symbol as argument and that terminal matches the next symbol of input, it returns a tree consisting of a single leaf node labeled with that symbol. 2. When parse is called with a nonterminal, N, it calls transition. If transition succeeds, it returns an ordered set of subtrees. Parse combines these into a tree whose root is N and whose children are the subtrees returned by transition.

29 29 Modifications to return the parse tree (cont’d) 3. In searching for a path through a network, transition calls parse on the label of each arc. On success, parse returns a tree representing a parse of that symbol. Transition saves these subtrees in an ordered set and, on finding a path through the network, returns the ordered set of parse trees corresponding to the sequence of arc labels on the path.

30 30 Comments of transition networks They capture the regularity in the sentence structure They exploit the fact that only a small vocabulary is needed in a specific domain If a sentence “doesn’t make sense”, it might be caught by the domain information. For instance, the answer to both of the following questions is “there is none”  “Pick up the blue cylinder”  “Pick up the red blue cylinder”

31 31 The Chomsky Hierarchy and CFGs A CFG: a single nonterminal is allowed on the left-hand side. CFGs are not powerful enough to represent natural language Simply add plural nouns to the dogs world grammar: noun  men noun  dogs verb  bites verb  like “A men bites a dogs” will be a legal sentence

32 32 Options to deal with context Extend CFGs Use context-sensitive grammars (CSGs) With CSGs the only restriction is that the RHS is at least as long as the LHS Note that the one higher class, recursively enumerable languages or Turing recognizable languages is not an usually regarded as an option

33 33 A context-sensitive grammar sentence  noun_phrase verb_phrase noun_phrase  article number noun noun_phrase  number noun number  singular number  plural article singular  a singular article singular  the singular article plural  the plural singular noun  dog singular singular noun  man singular plural noun  men plural plural noun  dogs plural singular verb_phrase  singular verb plural verb_phrase  plural verb

34 34 A context-sensitive grammar (cont’d) singular verb  bites singular verb  likes plural verb  bite plural verb  like

35 35 “The dogs bite” sentence  noun_phrase verb_phrase  article plural noun verb_phrase  The plural noun verb_phrase  The dogs plural verb_phrase  The dogs plural verb  The dogs bite

36 36 CSGs for practical parsing 1.The number of rules and nonterminals in the grammar increase drastically. 2.They obscure the phrase structure of the language that is so clearly represented in the context-free rules 3.By attempting to handle more complicated checks for agreement and semantic consistency in the grammar itself, they lose many of the benefits of separating the syntactic and semantic components of language 4.CSGs do not address the problem of building a semantic representation of the text


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