-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 4
LkbGeneration
This page was adapted from JacyGeneration by MichaelGoodman, and therefore many of the examples are from the JACY Grammar.
Contents
- Overview
- Generating Semantically Empty Lexical Entries (trigger.mtr)
- Generating Unknown Words
- Selective Generation (globals.lisp)
- Other Notes
- Trouble Shooting
Described below is generation using the mtr rule formalism developed in the LOGON project.
Three files control the process mt.lsp, mtr.lsp and trigger.mtr. They are loaded by the script file.
This file controls when to add lexical entries with empty semantics to the generator chart. If they were all added all the time then the chart would get too big.
- example of a rule for the past tense ending:
ta-end_gr := arg0e_gr &
[ CONTEXT [ RELS <! [ ARG0.E.TENSE past ] !> ],
FLAGS.TRIGGER "ta-end" ].
- example of a rule for copulas:
-- You can use regular expressions in the strings: "~.*_a_"
;; should use lexical type for na-adj
na-cop-lex_gr := arg0e_gr &
[ CONTEXT [ RELS <! [ PRED "~.*_a_"] !> ],
FLAGS.TRIGGER "na-cop-lex" ].
- Example of a case marker:
;;; ARG1 is ga
ga_gr_1 := arg0e_gr &
[ CONTEXT [ RELS <! [ ARG0.E.PASS -, ARG1 individual & #i ] !> ],
FLAGS [SUBSUME < #i >,
TRIGGER "ga" ]].
;;;
;;; automatically generate rules for all semantically empty lexical entries
;;; which don't already have trigger rules
;;;
(loop
with *package* = (find-package :lkb)
for id in mrs::*empty-semantics-lexical-entries*
do
(unless (or #+:mt
(gethash id mt::*transfer-triggers*)
(member id mrs::*gen-rule-ids*))
(format
t
"~(~a~)_gr := generator_rule &~%~
[ CONTEXT [ RELS <! [ PRED \"non_existing_rel\" ] !> ],~% ~
FLAGS.TRIGGER \"~(~a~)\" ].~%~%"
id id)))
;;; (25-dec-04; oe, 13-Jun-06 FCB)
This produces trigger rules of the form:
tomae_numcl_gr := generator_rule &
[ CONTEXT [ RELS <! [ PRED "non_existing_rel" ] !> ],
FLAGS.TRIGGER "tomae_numcl" ].
which should go into the trigger.mtr file until you decide how to trigger them.
Note, before redoing this (to see if you need any changes for a new version of the grammar) you should:
- delete all existing automatically generated rules
- delete the lexicon and generator cache
- load the grammar, index for generation
- run the above loop and then add to the trigger file
- It would be nice to be able to access the grammar's type hierarchy when writing trigger rules.
You can trigger the generation of unknown words in the LKB by instantiating *generic-lexical-entries*. There is an example of this in the ERG's global.lsp file.
You can block generation of some non-empty predicates by putting it in the list *duplicate-lex-ids* in globals.lisp. Jacy currently does this to block informal and variant forms for which we have no available filter. Note that this is a list of lex-ids, not predicate names.
Note: If you want this list to also be seen by ace, you need to move it to a separate file (see a recent ERG for examples of how to do this).
(setf *duplicate-lex-ids*
'(;; s-end1-decl-lex - emphatic sentence enders
ga-sap keredomo-send kedomo-send ga-sap kedo-send shi-send
yo-2 yo-3 keredo-send exclamation-mark ze zo zo-2
;; s-end1-decl-minusahon-lex - emphatic sentence enders
i-emp
;; variant forms of numbers (hankaku)
zero_card_a one_card_a two_card_a three_card_a four_card_a
five_card_a six_card_a seven_card_a eight_card_a nine_card_a
;; variant forms of numbers (zenkaku)
zero_card one_card two_card three_card four_card
five_card six_card seven_card eight_card nine_card
;;; indefinite pronouns FIXME - improve semantics
donna douiu dono-det
))
You can also block rules from being used in generation by adding them to *gen-ignore-rules*, also in globals.lisp.
(setf *gen-ignore-rules*
'(punct_bang_orule)
generation-ignore-lexemes := "../lkb/nogen-lex.set".
generation-ignore-rules := "../lkb/nogen-rules.set".
(setf *gen-packing-p* t)
(setf *gen-filtering-p* t)
(setf *packing-restrictor* '(RELS HCONS ORTH STEM RULE-NAME))
This is useful when you are debugging.
(progn
(mt:initialize-transfer)
(mt:read-transfer-rules
(list
"~/delphin/grammars/japanese/generation.mtr")
"Generator Triggger Rules"
:filter nil :task :trigger :recurse nil :subsume nil))
At the end of generation, the lkb checks that the MRS of the generated string is subsumed by the input MRS. That is, it contains all the information in the input. You can omit the check entirely by setting *bypass-equality-check* to t. You can relax the check by setting the post-generation semantic equivalence check to filter mode, i.e. prefer results that satisfy the test when available, but if no outputs pass the equivalence test at all, then output all complete generator results. This is set in lkb/globals.lsp.
; output all complete generated results
(setf *bypass-equality-check* t)
; prefer results with MRS subsumed by the input
; but if none exist then output all complete generated results
(setf *bypass-equality-check* :filter)
You can manually see if a predicate is on the generator's index with the following command:
(gethash "_inu_n_rel" mrs::*relation-index*)
Where _inu_n_rel is the relation name.
If you try to generate but nothing happens for a very long time, even though you have a very low number of edges set, the problem may be in the morphology. You can test the morphology by running batch-check-morphology: this checks all inflectional forms for all words, so can also be very slow.
A quicker test is to comment out all inflectional rules except those used in a single test sentence, reload the grammar and then try generating that sentence.
If a rule introduces a predicate somewhere other than in the C-CONT, then it will not be indexed and generation will fail with the warning:
Warning: invalid predicates:|"predicate-name"|
Make sure all predicates are either in lexical entries or C-CONT.
#+:tsdb
(tsdb::read-model (lkb-pathname (parent-directory) "jhpstg.g.mem"))
#+:tsdb
(setf *unpacking-scoring-hook* #'tsdb::mem-score-configuration)
This should work in the LKB SVN as well as the LOGON tree, and is the basis for ranking and selective unpacking in generation and also in parsing.
Home | Forum | Discussions | Events