
arXiv: cmp-lg/9610005
In many applications, it is necessary to determine the similarity of two strings. A widely-used notion of string similarity is the edit distance: the minimum number of insertions, deletions, and substitutions required to transform one string into the other. In this report, we provide a stochastic model for string edit distance. Our stochastic model allows us to learn a string edit distance function from a corpus of examples. We illustrate the utility of our approach by applying it to the difficult problem of learning the pronunciation of words in conversational speech. In this application, we learn a string edit distance with one fourth the error rate of the untrained Levenshtein distance. Our approach is applicable to any string classification problem that may be solved using a similarity function against a database of labeled prototypes. Keywords: string edit distance, Levenshtein distance, stochastic transduction, syntactic pattern recognition, prototype dictionary, spelling correction, string correction, string similarity, string classification, speech recognition, pronunciation modeling, Switchboard corpus.
http://www.cs.princeton.edu/~ristad/papers/pu-532-96.ps.gz
FOS: Computer and information sciences, Computer Science - Computation and Language, Computation and Language (cs.CL)
FOS: Computer and information sciences, Computer Science - Computation and Language, Computation and Language (cs.CL)
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