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GENERALIZED OPTIMAL LINEAR ORDERS

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Abstract

The sequential structure of language, and the order of words in a sentence specifically, plays a central role in human language processing. Consequently, in designing computational models of language, the de facto approach is to present sentences to machines with the words ordered in the same order as in the original human-authored sentence. The very essence of this work is to question the implicit assumption that this is desirable and inject theoretical soundness into the consideration of word order in natural language processing. In this thesis, we begin by uniting the disparate treatments of word order in cognitive science, psycholinguistics, computational linguistics, and natural language processing under a flexible algorithmic framework. We proceed to use this heterogeneous theoretical foundation as the basis for exploring new word orders with an undercurrent of psycholinguistic optimality. In particular, we focus on notions of dependency length minimization given the difficulties in human and computational language processing in handling long-distance dependencies. We then discuss algorithms for finding optimal word orders efficiently in spite of the combinatorial space of possibilities. We conclude by addressing the implications of these word orders on human language and their downstream impacts when integrated in computational models.

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Description

200 pages

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Date Issued

2020-08

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Keywords

Algorithms; Combinatorial Optimization; Computational Linguistics; Dependency Length Minimization; Natural Language Processing; Psycholinguistics

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Committee Chair

Cardie, Claire T.

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Committee Member

Kleinberg, Robert David

Degree Discipline

Computer Science

Degree Name

M.S., Computer Science

Degree Level

Master of Science

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Government Document

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Attribution 4.0 International

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dissertation or thesis

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