English

Decoding with Finite-State Transducers on GPUs

Computation and Language 2017-01-18 v2 Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing

Abstract

Weighted finite automata and transducers (including hidden Markov models and conditional random fields) are widely used in natural language processing (NLP) to perform tasks such as morphological analysis, part-of-speech tagging, chunking, named entity recognition, speech recognition, and others. Parallelizing finite state algorithms on graphics processing units (GPUs) would benefit many areas of NLP. Although researchers have implemented GPU versions of basic graph algorithms, limited previous work, to our knowledge, has been done on GPU algorithms for weighted finite automata. We introduce a GPU implementation of the Viterbi and forward-backward algorithm, achieving decoding speedups of up to 5.2x over our serial implementation running on different computer architectures and 6093x over OpenFST.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1701.03038,
  title  = {Decoding with Finite-State Transducers on GPUs},
  author = {Arturo Argueta and David Chiang},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1701.03038},
  year   = {2017}
}

Comments

accepted at EACL 2017

R2 v1 2026-06-22T17:47:28.848Z