Abstract
Corpus-based methods for natural language processing often use supervised training, requiring expensive manual annotation of training corpora. This paper investigates methods for reducing annotation cost by sample selection. In this approach, during training the learning program examines many unlabeled examples and selects for labeling (annotation) only those that are most informative at each stage. This avoids redundantly annotating examples that contribute little new information. This paper extends our previous work on committee-based sample selection for probabilistic classifiers. We describe a family of methods for committee-based sample selection, and report experimental results for the task of stochastic part-of-speech tagging. We find that all variants achieve a significant reduction in annotation cost, though their computational efficiency differs. In particular, the simplest method, which has no parameters to tune, gives excellent results. We also show that sample selection yields a significant reduction in the size of the model used by the tagger.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 319-326 |
Number of pages | 8 |
Journal | Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics |
Volume | 1996-June |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 1996 |
Event | 34th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics, ACL 1996 - Santa Cruz, United States Duration: 24 Jun 1996 → 27 Jun 1996 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 1996, Association for Computational Linguistics.