Understanding Compositional Data Augmentation in Typologically Diverse Morphological Inflection
Data augmentation techniques are widely used in low-resource automatic morphological inflection to overcome data sparsity. However, the full implications of these techniques remain poorly understood. In this study, we aim to shed light on the theoretical aspects of the prominent data augmentation st...
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Main Authors | , |
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Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
23.05.2023
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Data augmentation techniques are widely used in low-resource automatic
morphological inflection to overcome data sparsity. However, the full
implications of these techniques remain poorly understood. In this study, we
aim to shed light on the theoretical aspects of the prominent data augmentation
strategy StemCorrupt (Silfverberg et al., 2017; Anastasopoulos and Neubig,
2019), a method that generates synthetic examples by randomly substituting stem
characters in gold standard training examples. To begin, we conduct an
information-theoretic analysis, arguing that StemCorrupt improves compositional
generalization by eliminating spurious correlations between morphemes,
specifically between the stem and the affixes. Our theoretical analysis further
leads us to study the sample efficiency with which StemCorrupt reduces these
spurious correlations. Through evaluation across seven typologically distinct
languages, we demonstrate that selecting a subset of datapoints with both high
diversity and high predictive uncertainty significantly enhances the
data-efficiency of StemCorrupt. However, we also explore the impact of
typological features on the choice of the data selection strategy and find that
languages incorporating a high degree of allomorphy and phonological
alternations derive less benefit from synthetic examples with high uncertainty.
We attribute this effect to phonotactic violations induced by StemCorrupt,
emphasizing the need for further research to ensure optimal performance across
the entire spectrum of natural language morphology. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2305.13658 |