II UNL Panel

From UNL Wiki
(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
(Current answers)
(Current answers)
Line 47: Line 47:
  
 
;4. John took a very long nap.
 
;4. John took a very long nap.
 +
*a) exp(took a nap,John), i.e., as a general relation "experiencer" between "took a nap" and "John", without any reference to the fact that it was a "long" nap;
 +
*b) exp(took a nap.@intensifier,John), i.e., as a general relation "experiencer" between "took a nap" and "John" and an intensification attribute (in this case, indicate which intensifier should be used, in order to indicate that nap was "very long" and not, for instance, "long" and "deep";
 +
*c) exp(take,John)cnt(take,nap)mod(nap,long.@plus), i.e., as three relations: an experiencer relation between "take" and "John", a content relation between "take" and "nap", and a modifier relation between "nap" and "long.@plus" (in this case, consider the case of languages were "to take a nap" would be consider one single lexical unit);
 +
*d) other (please specify);
  
 
;5. Mary should have not come so early.
 
;5. Mary should have not come so early.

Revision as of 15:31, 31 July 2014

The II UNL Panel will be devoted to the nature and role of relations and attributes in the UNL framework.

Contents

Goal

The main purpose of the UNL Panel is to collect the opinion of specialists, from inside and outside the UNL Community, about technical issues of the UNL, as to prepare the ground for an in-depth revision of the current specifications.

Rationale

Originally proposed more than 15 years ago, the UNL Specs have not escaped from the action of time and have not incorporated yet several recent advances in the domain of natural language processing. Additionally, there has been a claim for better standardization practices in the UNL framework, especially after the results of the large-scale development inside the UNLweb. In order to organize this discussion, the UNDL Foundation divided the subjects into three chapters, to be addressed in three different meetings:

  • Universal Words (the set, notation and properties of UWs), which have been already addressed at the I UNL Panel (COLING 2012), and whose results are available at MARTINS, R. (ed). (2013). Lexical Issues of UNL: Universal Networking Language 2012 Panel. Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
  • Relations and Attributes (the set, notation and properties of relations and attributes), which is the object of this II UNL Panel; and
  • Document structure (format, encoding, schema and validation)

Questions

Considering the commitments, assumptions and properties defined at the Introduction to UNL, how would you represent, as a language-independent semantic graph, the following English sentences?

  1. The disappointment killed Mary.
  2. The book is right under the table.
  3. Peter is between John and Mary.
  4. John took a very long nap.
  5. Mary should have not come so early.

Current answers

The sentences above illustrate some theoretical and practical issues concerning relations and attributes that have been receiving several different possible answers within the current UNL framework. The main goal of II UNL Panel is to discuss which answers would be more appropriate and feasible, considering the state of the art of the theory and technology on natural language processing. We would ask participants to use them as starting points for their presentations, but we would expect them to suggest some general procedures to be adopted in similar cases. The current answers are the following:

1. The disappointment killed Mary.
  • a) agt(killed,disappointment), i.e., as an agent relation between "killed" and "disappointment", because "disappointment" caused Mary to die;
  • b) agt(killled,disappointment.@metaphor), i.e., as an agent relation between "killed" and "disappointment" and an attribute .@metaphor to be assigned to "disappointment" (or to "killed"? or to "agt"?), in order to indicate that a "disappointment" cannot actually "cause" the death of anyone;
  • c) man(killed,disappointment), i.e., as a manner relation between "killed" and "disappointment", because a disappointment is rather a manner or a state in which Mary died;
  • d) ???(killed,disappointment), i.e., as a different relation between "killed" and "disappointment" (in this case, which relation?);
  • e) killed(disappointment, Mary), i.e., not as a semantic case, but as a content relation (in this case, how to handle languages where the verb "to kill" is lexicalized as "to cause to die"?).
  • f) other (please specify).
2. The book is right under the table.
  • a) place(book,table), i.e., as a general relation "place" between "book" and "table", without any reference to the idea that the book is "under" (and not "in", "above", "near" etc.);
  • b) under(book,table), i.e., as a specific relation "under" between "book" and "table", without any reference to the idea that "under" is actually a possible value of "place";
  • c) relation1(book,under)relation2(under,table), i.e., as two different relations, as if there is no direct relation between "book" and "table" (in this case, which would be labels of relation1 and relation2?);
  • d) place(book,table.@under), i.e., as a general "place" relation between "book" and "table" and by an attribute "@under" assigned to "table", in order to specify its role;
  • e) place.@under(book,table), i.e., as a general "place" relation between "book" and "table" and by an attribute "@under" assigned to the relation itself;
  • f) other (because no alternative above represents the fact that the book is "right under" the table)[1]
3. Peter is between John and Mary.
  • a) place(Peter,:01)between:01(John,Mary), i.e., as a general relation "place" between "Peter" and the relation "between(John, Mary)";
  • b) place(Peter,:01.@between)and:01(John,Mary), i.e., as a general relation "place" between the relation "and(John,Mary)" with the attribute .@between;
  • c) between(Peter,John,Mary), i.e., as one single ternary relation "between" between "Peter", "John" and "Mary" (in this case, consider the implications, to the model, of relations with three arguments);
  • d) relation1(Peter,John)relation2(Peter,Mary), i.e., as two (different?) relations between "Peter" and "John", and "Peter" and "Mary", because both "John" and "Mary" are spatial referents for "John" (in this case, please specify which relations);
  • e) place(Peter,John.@attribute1)place(Peter,Mary.@attribute2), i.e., as a general relation "place" between "Peter and "John", and "Peter" and "Mary", modified by the corresponding attributes (in this case, please specify which attributes);
  • f) other (please specify).
4. John took a very long nap.
  • a) exp(took a nap,John), i.e., as a general relation "experiencer" between "took a nap" and "John", without any reference to the fact that it was a "long" nap;
  • b) exp(took a nap.@intensifier,John), i.e., as a general relation "experiencer" between "took a nap" and "John" and an intensification attribute (in this case, indicate which intensifier should be used, in order to indicate that nap was "very long" and not, for instance, "long" and "deep";
  • c) exp(take,John)cnt(take,nap)mod(nap,long.@plus), i.e., as three relations: an experiencer relation between "take" and "John", a content relation between "take" and "nap", and a modifier relation between "nap" and "long.@plus" (in this case, consider the case of languages were "to take a nap" would be consider one single lexical unit);
  • d) other (please specify);
5. Mary should have not come so early.

Notes

  1. Consider, please, that the resulting semantic graph must be suitable for languages that do not lexicalize place relations, i.e., where "the book is right under the table" is translated as "the book is tableunder", where "under" is a locative case marker and not an adposition.
Software