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Can anyone suggest any algorithm and technique for spell checking? After some googling, I found some interesting ones such as this one from Peter Norvig, http://norvig.com/spell-correct.html and few others. However, most of them were written many years ago. Therefore, I am trying to find out whether is there any newer/improved approach to tackle such problem.

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Here is what I built...

  • Step 1: Store all the words in a Trie data structure. Wiki about trie.

  • Step 2: Train an RNN or RNTN to get seq2seq mapping for words and store the model

  • Step 3: Retrieve top n words with levenshtein distance with the. Wiki about LD with the word that you are trying to correct.

    • Naive Approach: Calculating the edit distance between the query term and every dictionary term. Very expensive.
    • Peter Norvig's Approach: Deriving all possible terms with an edit distance<=2 from the query term, and looking them up in the dictionary. Better, but still expensive (114,324 terms for word length=9 and edit distance=2) Check this.
    • Faroo's Approach: Deriving deletes only with an edit distance<=2 both from the query term and each dictionary term. Three orders of magnitudes faster. http://blog.faroo.com/2012/06/07...
  • Step 4: Based on the previous 2 or 3 or 4 words, predict the words that are retrieved from Step 3 above. Select the number of words depending on how much accuracy you want (Of course we want 100% accuracy), and the processing power of the machine running the code, you can select the number of words you wanna consider.

Check out this approach too. It's an acl paper from 2009. They call it - language independent auto correction.

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    $\begingroup$ Please elaborate how these steps work together: What is the input and the output in the NN in Step 2? Do you mean with "previous 2-4 words" the words in the text being corrected? In step 4 you predict the words from step 3 with the model from step 2. I guess you calculate their probability, is this right? What do you mean with "select the number of words depending on how much accuracy you want"? Is this an interactive approach where the final choice is left to the user? $\endgroup$
    – Claude
    Commented Jan 17, 2017 at 8:19
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Character level Recurrent Neural Network to the rescue here. Mainly you will build a character level language model using a recurrent neural network. Look into this github project. Github and also this medium blog to get a good understanding of the process.

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I would assume you want to do this for the cleaning phase of your project. Microsoft Cognitive Services provides a spell check API https://www.microsoft.com/cognitive-services/en-us/bing-spell-check-api.

If you are trying to group words into embedding's, then I might suggest Word2Vec or Glove. Glove is pre-trained and has a different specified number of dimensions for each vector. However, both can potentially account for misspellings as well as similarities.

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Might want to look at this using LSTM neural networks.

For bots and readers who need more text content here, I'm linking to a post that goes through a detailed development of an LSTM based spell correction algorithm. It would be silly for me to rewrite what is clearly spelled out in the link so what follows is the post's own description of what it does. Brackets are mine.

In this article, I will use bi-direction LSTM in the encoding layer and multi-head attention in the decoding layer [to write a program for spelling correction -- theory is explained and code is linked]. Basically, spelling correction in natural language processing and information retrieval literature mostly relies on pre-defined lexicons to detect spelling errors. Firstly, I will explain some other model architecture which is also used in Natural Language Processing task like speech recognition, spelling correction, language translation etc..

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  • $\begingroup$ As it’s currently written, your answer is unclear. Please edit to add additional details that will help others understand how this addresses the question asked. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center. $\endgroup$
    – Community Bot
    Commented Aug 15, 2023 at 9:58

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