ISBN:
9789400772847
Language:
English
Pages:
Online-Ressource (VIII, 260 p. 13 illus, online resource)
Series Statement:
Text, Speech and Language Technology 47
Series Statement:
SpringerLink
Series Statement:
Bücher
Parallel Title:
Druckausg. Computing meaning ; 4
Keywords:
Computer science
;
Electronic data processing
;
Information systems
;
Computational linguistics
;
Semantics
;
Computer Science
;
Computer science
;
Electronic data processing
;
Information systems
;
Computational linguistics
;
Semantics
;
Semantik
;
Computerlinguistik
;
Online-Ressource
Abstract:
This book is a collection of papers by leading researchers in computational semantics. It presents a state-of-the-art overview of recent and current research in computational semantics, including descriptions of new methods for constructing and improving resources for semantic computation, such as WordNet, VerbNet, and semantically annotated corpora. It also presents new statistical methods in semantic computation, such as the application of distributional semantics in the compositional calculation of sentence meanings. Computing the meaning of sentences, texts, and spoken or texted dialogue is the ultimate challenge in natural language processing, and the key to a wide range of exciting applications. The breadth and depth of coverage of this book makes it suitable as a reference and overview of the state of the field for researchers in Computational Linguistics, Semantics, Computer Science, Cognitive Science, and Artificial Intelligence
Description / Table of Contents:
Computing Meaning; Contents; Contributors; Computing Meaning: Annotation, Representation, and Inference; 1 Introduction; 2 About This Book; 2.1 Semantic Representation and Compositionality; 2.2 Inference and Understanding; 2.3 Semantic Resources and Annotation; References; Part I: Semantic Representation and Compositionality; Deterministic Statistical Mapping of Sentences to Underspecified Semantics; 1 Introduction; 2 Direct Semantic Mapping; 3 Semantic Expressions; 3.1 Connectives and Examples; 4 Encoding Semantics as Dependencies; 4.1 Alignment; 4.2 Headedness; 4.3 Label Construction
Description / Table of Contents:
5 Experiments5.1 Data Preparation; 5.2 Parser; 5.3 Results; 6 Conclusion and Further Work; References; A Formal Approach to Linking Logical Form and Vector-Space Lexical Semantics; 1 Introduction; 2 Background; Textual Entailment; Logic-Based Semantics; Distributional Models for Lexical Meaning; Markov Logic; 3 Linking Logical Form and Vector Spaces; 3.1 Lexical Mapping and Inference Projection; 3.2 Addressing Polysemy; 4 Transforming Natural Language Text to Logical Form; 5 Ambiguity in Word Meaning; 5.1 A Lexical Ambiguity Example; 5.2 Hypernymy; 6 Implicativity
Description / Table of Contents:
6.1 Inferences with Nested Propositions6.2 Interaction with Other Phenomena; 7 Preliminary Evaluation; 8 Future Work; 9 Conclusion; References; Annotations that Effectively Contribute to Semantic Interpretation; 1 Introduction: Functions of Semantic Annotations; 2 The Semantics of Semantic Annotations; 2.1 Interpreting Annotations Expressed in XML; 2.2 The Design of Semantic Annotation Languages; 2.2.1 The CASCADES Design methodology; 2.2.2 The Case of ISO-TimeML; Abstract Syntax; Semantics; Concrete Syntax; 3 Combining Semantic Annotations and Semantic Representations; 3.1 Contextualization
Description / Table of Contents:
3.2 Semantic Alignment3.3 Explicitation; 3.3.1 Semantic Roles; 3.3.2 Implicit Discourse Relations; 4 Conclusions and Perspectives; References; Concrete Sentence Spaces for Compositional Distributional Models of Meaning; 1 Introduction; 2 Background; 3 From Truth-Theoretic to Corpus-Based Meaning; Nouns and Transitive Verbs; Adjective Phrases; Prepositional Phrases; Adverbs; 4 Concrete Computations; 5 Different Grammatical Structures; 6 Ambiguous Words; 7 Related Work; References; Part II: Inference and Understanding; Recognizing Textual Entailment and Computational Semantics; 1 Introduction
Description / Table of Contents:
2 The Logical Method2.1 Robust Semantic Analysis; 2.2 Applying Theorem Proving; 2.3 Implementation and Results; 3 A Critical Evaluation of Performance; 3.1 Proofs Found for Entailment Pairs (True Positives); 3.1.1 Conjunction Elimination; 3.1.2 Verb Phrase Coordination; 3.1.3 Active-Passive Alternation; 3.1.4 Past and Present Participles; 3.1.5 Relative Clauses and Control Constructions; 3.1.6 Pronouns; 3.2 Incorrect Proofs Found (False Positives); 3.2.1 Incorrect Syntactic Analyses; 3.2.2 Incorrect Semantic Analysis; 3.3 Missing Proofs (False Negatives); 4 Discussion and Conclusion
Description / Table of Contents:
References
Note:
Description based upon print version of record
DOI:
10.1007/978-94-007-7284-7
URL:
Volltext
(lizenzpflichtig)
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