Difference between revisions of "Apertium-neural"
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(Created page with "Apertium was originally developed to offer a free/open-source framework for creating RBMT systems. It was modelled on existing systems, but targetted at related languages, try...") |
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apertium-destxt | apertium-preprocess | apertium-encode | apertium-decode | apertium-retxt |
apertium-destxt | apertium-preprocess | apertium-encode | apertium-decode | apertium-retxt |
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</pre> |
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Backend: |
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* Own built(?) |
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* DyNet --- forked? |
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==Refs== |
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* R.P. Ñeco, M.L. Forcada, "Asynchronous translations with recurrent neural nets", in Proceedings of ICNN'97 (Houston, Texas, 8-12.06.1997) , vol. 4, p. 2535-2540 [PS] |
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[[Category:Ideas]] |
[[Category:Ideas]] |
Latest revision as of 15:06, 29 June 2020
Apertium was originally developed to offer a free/open-source framework for creating RBMT systems. It was modelled on existing systems, but targetted at related languages, trying to do one thing well.
What might an Apertium NMT system for lesser-resourced and marginalised languages look like?
Thoughts:
- Trains without GPU or large compute
- Optimised for small corpora (under 100k parallel sentences)
- Includes linguistic tricks
- C++, autotools
- Works with existing tools (formatters, APY etc.)
Pipeline(?):
apertium-destxt | apertium-preprocess | apertium-encode | apertium-decode | apertium-retxt
Backend:
- Own built(?)
- DyNet --- forked?
Refs[edit]
- R.P. Ñeco, M.L. Forcada, "Asynchronous translations with recurrent neural nets", in Proceedings of ICNN'97 (Houston, Texas, 8-12.06.1997) , vol. 4, p. 2535-2540 [PS]