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OpenFst Library

OpenFst is a library for constructing, combining, optimizing, and searching weighted finite-state transducers (FSTs). Weighted finite-state transducers are automata where each transition has an input label, an output label, and a weight. The more familiar finite-state acceptor is represented as a transducer with each transition's input and output label equal. Finite-state acceptors are used to represent sets of strings (specifically, regular or rational sets); finite-state transducers are used to represent binary relations between pairs of strings (specifically, rational transductions). The weights can be used to represent the cost of taking a particular transition.

FSTs have key applications in speech recognition and synthesis, machine translation, optical character recognition, pattern matching, string processing, machine learning, information extraction and retrieval among others. Often a weighted transducer is used to represent a probabilistic model (e.g., an n-gram model, pronunciation model). FSTs can be optimized by determinization and minimization, models can be applied to hypothesis sets (also represented as automata) or cascaded by finite-state composition, and the best results can be selected by shortest-path algorithms.

This library was developed at Google Research (M. Riley, J. Schalkwyk, W. Skut) and NYU's Courant Institute (C. Allauzen, M. Mohri). It is intended to be comprehensive, flexible, efficient and scale well to large problems.. It is an open source project distributed under the Apache license.

-- CyrilAllauzen
-- MichaelRiley

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Topic revision: r26 - 2007-07-05 - CyrilAllauzen
 
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