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Does Incomplete Syntax Influence Korean Language Model? Focusing on Word Order and Case Markers

Authors :
Kim, Jong Myoung
Lee, Young-Jun
Han, Yong-jin
Jung, Sangkeun
Choi, Ho-Jin
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Syntactic elements, such as word order and case markers, are fundamental in natural language processing. Recent studies show that syntactic information boosts language model performance and offers clues for people to understand their learning mechanisms. Unlike languages with a fixed word order such as English, Korean allows for varied word sequences, despite its canonical structure, due to case markers that indicate the functions of sentence components. This study explores whether Korean language models can accurately capture this flexibility. We note that incomplete word orders and omitted case markers frequently appear in ordinary Korean communication. To investigate this further, we introduce the Syntactically Incomplete Korean (SIKO) dataset. Through SIKO, we assessed Korean language models' flexibility with incomplete syntax and confirmed the dataset's training value. Results indicate these models reflect Korean's inherent flexibility, accurately handling incomplete inputs. Moreover, fine-tuning with SIKO enhances the ability to handle common incomplete Korean syntactic forms. The dataset's simple construction process, coupled with significant performance enhancements, solidifies its standing as an effective data augmentation technique.<br />Comment: COLM 2024; Code and dataset is available in https://github.com/grayapple-git/SIKO

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2407.09184
Document Type :
Working Paper