We present an approach for assessing how multilingual large language models (LLMs) learn syntax in terms of multi-formalism syntactic structures. We aim to recover constituent and dependency structures by casting parsing as sequence labeling. To do so, we select a few LLMs and study them on 13 diverse UD treebanks for dependency parsing and 10 treebanks for constituent parsing. Our results show that: (i) the framework is consistent across encodings, (ii) pre-trained word vectors do not favor constituency representations of syntax over dependencies, (iii) sub-word tokenization is needed to represent syntax, in contrast to character-based models, and (iv) occurrence of a language in the pretraining data is more important than the amount of task data when recovering syntax from the word vectors.
Assessment of Pre-Trained Models Across Languages and Grammars
The study assesses multilingual large language models' ability to learn syntax through sequence labeling on multiple treebanks, highlighting the importance of sub-word tokenization and pretraining data diversity.
- Year
- 2023
- Venue
- arXiv 2023
- Authors
- 3
- Hosting
- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
Cite
Notes
Only stored in your browser.
Attribution
- Abstract & full text
- arxiv.org/abs/2309.11165ARXIV-DEFAULT
- TL;DR
- Semantic Scholar