oai:arXiv.org:2406.01919
Computer Science
2024
12.06.2024
Recently, there has been considerable attention on detecting hallucinations and omissions in Machine Translation (MT) systems.
The two dominant approaches to tackle this task involve analyzing the MT system's internal states or relying on the output of external tools, such as sentence similarity or MT quality estimators.
In this work, we introduce OTTAWA, a novel Optimal Transport (OT)-based word aligner specifically designed to enhance the detection of hallucinations and omissions in MT systems.
Our approach explicitly models the missing alignments by introducing a "null" vector, for which we propose a novel one-side constrained OT setting to allow an adaptive null alignment.
Our approach yields competitive results compared to state-of-the-art methods across 18 language pairs on the HalOmi benchmark.
In addition, it shows promising features, such as the ability to distinguish between both error types and perform word-level detection without accessing the MT system's internal states.
;Comment: Accepted by ACL 2024 Findings
Huang, Chenyang,Ghaddar, Abbas,Kobyzev, Ivan,Rezagholizadeh, Mehdi,Zaiane, Osmar R.,Chen, Boxing, 2024, OTTAWA: Optimal TransporT Adaptive Word Aligner for Hallucination and Omission Translation Errors Detection