Title: Chapter 17' Lexical Semantics
1Chapter 17. Lexical Semantics
- From Chapter 17 of An Introduction to Natural
Language Processing, Computational Linguistics,
and Speech Recognition, by Daniel Jurafsky
and James H. Martin
2Background
- We made minimal use of the notion of the meaning
of a word previously. - Words and their meanings provided the appropriate
bits and pieces necessary to construct adequate
meaning representations for entire sentences. - While words may contribute content to the
meanings of sentences, they do not themselves
have meanings. - Words do not refer to the world, cannot be judged
to be true or false, or literal or figurative, or
- This narrow conception of the role of words in a
semantic theory leads to a view of the lexicon as
a simple listing of symbolic fragments devoid of
any systematic structure.
3Background
- In this chapter,
- the lexicon has a highly systematic structure
governing what words can mean, and - how they can be used.
- This structure consists of
- Relations among words and their meanings, as well
as - The internal structure of individual words.
- Lexical semantics
4Background
- Lexeme
- An individual entry in the lexicon
- Be thought of as a pairing of particular
orthographic and phonological form with some form
of symbolic meaning representation - A lexicon a finite list of lexemes
- Dictionaries are fruitful places to start with.
right adj. located near the right hand esp.
being on the right when
facing the same direction as the observer. left
adj. located nearer to this side of the body
than the right. red adj. the color of blood
or a ruby. blood adj. the red liquid that
circulates in the heart, arteries and veins of
animal
- Circularity in them
- Dictionaries entries are often not definitions at
all, but rather descriptions of lexemes in terms
of other lexemes.
5Background
- The approach of dictionaries will fail without
some ultimate grounding in the external world. - Fortunately, there are still wealth of semantic
information contained in this kind of definition. - Left and right are similar kinds of lexemes,
standing in some kind of alternation, or
opposition, to one another. - Red is a color, it can be applied to both blood
and rubies, and blood is a liquid. - Given a sufficiently large database of facts like
these, many applications are quite capable of
performing sophisticated semantic tasks (even if
they do not really know their right from their
left).
6Background
- To summarize
- We can capture quite a bit about the semantics of
individual lexemes by analyzing and labeling
their relations to other lexemes in various
settings. - We will be interested in accounting for the
similarities and differences among different
lexemes in similar settings and - The nature of relation among lexemes in a single
setting (internal structures of lexemes, 16.3).
716.1 Relations among Lexemes and their Senses
- Homonymy
- A relation that holds between words that have the
same form with unrelated meanings. - (16.1) Instead, a bank can hold the investments
in a custodial account in the clients name. - (16.2) But as agriculture burgeons on the east
bank, the river will shrink even more.
816.1 Relations among Lexemes and their Senses
- Polysemy
- Multiple related meanings within a single lexeme
- (16.7) While some banks furbish sperm only to
married women, other are much less restrictive. - Blood bank, egg blank, sperm bank
916.1 Relations among Lexemes and their Senses
- Synonym
- Different lexemes with the same meaning
- (16.14) How big is that plane?
- (16.15) Would I be flying on a large or small
plane?
1016.1 Relations among Lexemes and their Senses
- Hyponym
- Pairings where one lexeme denotes a subclass of
the other - The more specific lexeme as a hyponym of the more
general one, and the more general term as a
hypernym of the more specific one - Car is a hyponym of vehicle, and vehicle is
hypernym of car.
1116.2 WORDNET A Database of Lexical Relations
- WordNet
- The most well-developed and widely used lexical
DB for English - Handcrafting from scratch, rather than mining
information from existing dictionaries and
thesauri - Consisting three separate DBs
- One each for nouns and verbs, and
- A third for adjectives and adverbs
1216.2 WORDNET A Database of Lexical Relations
A portion of the WordNet 1.6 entry for the noun
bass
1316.2 WORDNET A Database of Lexical Relations
Distribution of senses Among the verbs in WordNet
1416.2 WORDNET A Database of Lexical Relations
Noun relations in WordNet
1516.2 WORDNET A Database of Lexical Relations
Verb relations in WordNet
1616.2 WORDNET A Database of Lexical Relations
Adjective and adverb relations in WordNet
1716.2 WORDNET A Database of Lexical Relations
Hyponym chains for two separate senses of the
lexeme bass
1816.3 The Internal Structure of Words
- Thematic roles
- First proposed by Gruber (1965) and Fillmore
(1968) - A set of categories providing a shallow semantic
language for characterizing certain arguments of
verbs - (16.22) Houstons Billy Hatcher broke a bat.
- (16.23) He opened a drawer.
- ? e, x, y Isa(e, Breaking)?Breaker(e,
BillyHatcher) - ?BrokenThing(e,y)?Isa(y,BaseballBat)
- ? e, x, y Isa(e, Opening)?Opener(h, he)
- ?OpenedThing(e, y)?Isa(y,Door)
- The deep roles are specific to each possible kind
of event Breaking ? Breaker Open ? Opener
1916.3 The Internal Structure of Words
- But Breaker and Opener have something in common
- They are both volitional actors, animate, and
they have direct casual relationship for their
events. - A thematic role is a way for expressing this
commonality. - The subject of both these verbs are agents.
- The thematic role for these objects is theme.
- (16.24) A company soccer game least year got so
rough that Mr. Cockwell (experiencer) broke his
collarbone and an associate broke an ankle. - (16.25) The quake (force) broke glass in several
downtown skyscrapers. - (16.26) It (instrument) broke his jaw.
2016.3 The Internal Structure of Words
Some commonly-used thematic roles with their
definitions
2116.3 The Internal Structure of Words
Prototypical examples of various thematic roles
2216.3 The Internal Structure of WordsApplications
to Linking Theory and Shallow Semantic
Interpretation
- A common use of thematic roles in computational
system is as a shallow semantic language. (Ch.
21) - Another use of thematic roles, was as an
intermediary between semantic roles in conceptual
structure or common-sense knowledge like Breaker
and DrivenThing and their more language-specific
surface grammatical realizations as subject and
object. - Thematic hierarchy for assigning the subject
role - AGENT gt INSTRUMENT gt THEME
- (17.27) John opened the door
- AGENT THEME
- (17.28) John opened the door with the key
- AGENT THEME
INSTRUMENT - (17.29) The key opened the door
- AGENT THEME
- (17.30) The door was opened by John
- THEME
AGENT
2316.3 The Internal Structure of WordsApplications
to Linking Theory and Shallow Semantic
Interpretation
2416.3 The Internal Structure of WordsApplications
to Linking Theory and Shallow Semantic
Interpretation
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