n-gram

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Short description: Item sequences in computational linguistics


Six n-grams frequently found in titles of publications about Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), as of 7 May 2020

An n-gram is a sequence of n adjacent symbols in particular order. The symbols may be n adjacent letters (including punctuation marks and blanks), syllables, or rarely whole words found in a language dataset; or adjacent phonemes extracted from a speech-recording dataset, or adjacent base pairs extracted from a genome. They are collected from a text corpus or speech corpus. If Latin numerical prefixes are used, then n-gram of size 1 is called a "unigram", size 2 a "bigram" (or, less commonly, a "digram") etc. If, instead of the Latin ones, the English cardinal numbers are furtherly used, then they are called "four-gram", "five-gram", etc. Similarly, using Greek numerical prefixes such as "monomer", "dimer", "trimer", "tetramer", "pentamer", etc., or English cardinal numbers, "one-mer", "two-mer", "three-mer", etc. are used in computational biology, for polymers or oligomers of a known size, called k-mers. When the items are words, n-grams may also be called shingles.[1]

In the context of NLP, the use of n-grams allows bag-of-words models to capture information such as word order, which would not be possible in the traditional bag of words setting.

Examples

(Shannon 1951)[2] discussed n-gram models of English. For example:

  • 3-gram character model: in no ist lat whey cratict froure birs grocid pondenome of demonstures of the retagin is regiactiona of cre
  • 2-gram word model: the head and in frontal attack on an english writer that the character of this point is therefore another method for the letters that the time of who ever told the problem for an unexpected
Figure 1 n-gram examples from various disciplines
Field Unit Sample sequence 1-gram sequence 2-gram sequence 3-gram sequence
Vernacular name unigram bigram trigram
Order of resulting Markov model 0 1 2
Protein sequencing amino acid ... Cys-Gly-Leu-Ser-Trp ... ..., Cys, Gly, Leu, Ser, Trp, ... ..., Cys-Gly, Gly-Leu, Leu-Ser, Ser-Trp, ... ..., Cys-Gly-Leu, Gly-Leu-Ser, Leu-Ser-Trp, ...
DNA sequencing base pair ...AGCTTCGA... ..., A, G, C, T, T, C, G, A, ... ..., AG, GC, CT, TT, TC, CG, GA, ... ..., AGC, GCT, CTT, TTC, TCG, CGA, ...
Language model character ...to_be_or_not_to_be... ..., t, o, _, b, e, _, o, r, _, n, o, t, _, t, o, _, b, e, ... ..., to, o_, _b, be, e_, _o, or, r_, _n, no, ot, t_, _t, to, o_, _b, be, ... ..., to_, o_b, _be, be_, e_o, _or, or_, r_n, _no, not, ot_, t_t, _to, to_, o_b, _be, ...
Word n-gram language model word ... to be or not to be ... ..., to, be, or, not, to, be, ... ..., to be, be or, or not, not to, to be, ... ..., to be or, be or not, or not to, not to be, ...

Figure 1 shows several example sequences and the corresponding 1-gram, 2-gram and 3-gram sequences.

Here are further examples; these are word-level 3-grams and 4-grams (and counts of the number of times they appeared) from the Google n-gram corpus.[3]

3-grams

  • ceramics collectables collectibles (55)
  • ceramics collectables fine (130)
  • ceramics collected by (52)
  • ceramics collectible pottery (50)
  • ceramics collectibles cooking (45)

4-grams

  • serve as the incoming (92)
  • serve as the incubator (99)
  • serve as the independent (794)
  • serve as the index (223)
  • serve as the indication (72)
  • serve as the indicator (120)

References

  1. Broder, Andrei Z.; Glassman, Steven C.; Manasse, Mark S.; Zweig, Geoffrey (1997). "Syntactic clustering of the web". Computer Networks and ISDN Systems 29 (8): 1157–1166. doi:10.1016/s0169-7552(97)00031-7. 
  2. Shannon, Claude E. "The redundancy of English." Cybernetics; Transactions of the 7th Conference, New York: Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation. 1951.
  3. Alex Franz and Thorsten Brants (2006). "All Our N-gram are Belong to You". Google Research Blog. http://googleresearch.blogspot.com/2006/08/all-our-n-gram-are-belong-to-you.html. 

Further reading

See also

External links