Contextual Distortion Reveals Constituency: Masked Language Models are Implicit Parsers
About
Recent advancements in pre-trained language models (PLMs) have demonstrated that these models possess some degree of syntactic awareness. To leverage this knowledge, we propose a novel chart-based method for extracting parse trees from masked language models (LMs) without the need to train separate parsers. Our method computes a score for each span based on the distortion of contextual representations resulting from linguistic perturbations. We design a set of perturbations motivated by the linguistic concept of constituency tests, and use these to score each span by aggregating the distortion scores. To produce a parse tree, we use chart parsing to find the tree with the minimum score. Our method consistently outperforms previous state-of-the-art methods on English with masked LMs, and also demonstrates superior performance in a multilingual setting, outperforming the state of the art in 6 out of 8 languages. Notably, although our method does not involve parameter updates or extensive hyperparameter search, its performance can even surpass some unsupervised parsing methods that require fine-tuning. Our analysis highlights that the distortion of contextual representation resulting from syntactic perturbation can serve as an effective indicator of constituency across languages.
Related benchmarks
| Task | Dataset | Result | Rank | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unsupervised Parsing | PTB (test) | F1 Score50.8 | 75 | |
| Unsupervised Constituency Parsing | Chinese Treebank (CTB) (test) | -- | 36 | |
| Unsupervised Constituency Parsing | SUSANNE (test) | F1 Score41.2 | 32 | |
| Unsupervised Constituency Parsing | Penn TreeBank English (test) | -- | 16 | |
| Unsupervised Constituency Parsing | SPMRL (test) | German Score40.8 | 6 |