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Simulated Multiple Reference Training Improves Low-Resource Machine Translation

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 Added by Huda Khayrallah
 Publication date 2020
and research's language is English




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Many valid translations exist for a given sentence, yet machine translation (MT) is trained with a single reference translation, exacerbating data sparsity in low-resource settings. We introduce Simulated Multiple Reference Training (SMRT), a novel MT training method that approximates the full space of possible translations by sampling a paraphrase of the reference sentence from a paraphraser and training the MT model to predict the paraphrasers distribution over possible tokens. We demonstrate the effectiveness of SMRT in low-resource settings when translating to English, with improvements of 1.2 to 7.0 BLEU. We also find SMRT is complementary to back-translation.



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The data scarcity in low-resource languages has become a bottleneck to building robust neural machine translation systems. Fine-tuning a multilingual pre-trained model (e.g., mBART (Liu et al., 2020)) on the translation task is a good approach for low-resource languages; however, its performance will be greatly limited when there are unseen languages in the translation pairs. In this paper, we present a continual pre-training (CPT) framework on mBART to effectively adapt it to unseen languages. We first construct noisy mixed-language text from the monolingual corpus of the target language in the translation pair to cover both the source and target languages, and then, we continue pre-training mBART to reconstruct the original monolingual text. Results show that our method can consistently improve the fine-tuning performance upon the mBART baseline, as well as other strong baselines, across all tested low-resource translation pairs containing unseen languages. Furthermore, our approach also boosts the performance on translation pairs where both languages are seen in the original mBARTs pre-training. The code is available at https://github.com/zliucr/cpt-nmt.
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