Handling Compounding in Mobile Keyboard Input
This paper proposes a framework to improve the typing experience of mobile users in morphologically rich languages. Smartphone keyboards typically support features such as input decoding, corrections and predictions that all rely on language models. For latency reasons, these operations happen on de...
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Main Authors | , , , , , |
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Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
17.01.2022
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | This paper proposes a framework to improve the typing experience of mobile
users in morphologically rich languages. Smartphone keyboards typically support
features such as input decoding, corrections and predictions that all rely on
language models. For latency reasons, these operations happen on device, so the
models are of limited size and cannot easily cover all the words needed by
users for their daily tasks, especially in morphologically rich languages. In
particular, the compounding nature of Germanic languages makes their vocabulary
virtually infinite. Similarly, heavily inflecting and agglutinative languages
(e.g. Slavic, Turkic or Finno-Ugric languages) tend to have much larger
vocabularies than morphologically simpler languages, such as English or
Mandarin. We propose to model such languages with automatically selected
subword units annotated with what we call binding types, allowing the decoder
to know when to bind subword units into words. We show that this method brings
around 20% word error rate reduction in a variety of compounding languages.
This is more than twice the improvement we previously obtained with a more
basic approach, also described in the paper. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2201.06469 |