other,14-3-J05-1003,bq |
<term>
ranking
</term>
, using additional
<term>
|
features
|
</term>
of the
<term>
tree
</term>
as evidence
|
#8703
A second model then attempts to improve upon this initial ranking, using additional features of the tree as evidence. |
other,19-4-J05-1003,bq |
represented as an arbitrary set of
<term>
|
features
|
</term>
, without concerns about how these
|
#8729
The strength of our approach is that it allows a tree to be represented as an arbitrary set of features , without concerns about how these features interact or overlap and without the need to define a derivation or a generative model which takes these features into account. |
other,26-4-J05-1003,bq |
without concerns about how these
<term>
|
features
|
</term>
interact or overlap and without
|
#8736
The strength of our approach is that it allows a tree to be represented as an arbitrary set of features, without concerns about how these features interact or overlap and without the need to define a derivation or a generative model which takes these features into account. |
other,45-4-J05-1003,bq |
generative model
</term>
which takes these
<term>
|
features
|
</term>
into account . We introduce a new
|
#8755
The strength of our approach is that it allows a tree to be represented as an arbitrary set of features, without concerns about how these features interact or overlap and without the need to define a derivation or a generative model which takes these features into account. |
other,23-7-J05-1003,bq |
evidence from an additional 500,000
<term>
|
features
|
</term>
over
<term>
parse trees
</term>
that
|
#8822
The method combined the log-likelihood under a baseline model (that of Collins [1999]) with evidence from an additional 500,000 features over parse trees that were not included in the original model. |