English Disambiguation Grammar

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(Examples of disambiguation rules)
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*:For instance, the rule (['s],V)(BLK)(GER)=1; informs that the entry ['s] as a verb is to be preferred before a gerund (there are three entries ['s] in the dictionary: the contracted form of "is", the particle used to form the genitive and a plural suffix; if this rule is not stated, the system would simply select the first one appearing in the dictionary with the highest frequency)
 
*:For instance, the rule (['s],V)(BLK)(GER)=1; informs that the entry ['s] as a verb is to be preferred before a gerund (there are three entries ['s] in the dictionary: the contracted form of "is", the particle used to form the genitive and a plural suffix; if this rule is not stated, the system would simply select the first one appearing in the dictionary with the highest frequency)
 
=== File ===
 
=== File ===
The English d-grammar for the [[Corpus500]] may be downloaded from [http://www.unlweb.net/resources/corpus500/eng_ana_dgrammar.txt eng_ana_dgrammar.txt]. The complete English d-grammar may be exported from the [[UNLarium]]: UNLWEB>UNLARIUM>GRAMMAR>ENGLISH>EXPORT.
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The English d-grammar may be downloaded from [http://www.unlweb.net/resources/A1/eng_ana_dgrammar.txt eng_ana_dgrammar.txt]. The complete English d-grammar may be exported from the [[UNLarium]]: UNLWEB>UNLARIUM>GRAMMAR>ENGLISH>EXPORT.
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=== How to use d-grammars ===
 
=== How to use d-grammars ===
 
D-grammars must be uploaded to or provided directly at the tab '''d-rules''' in [[IAN]].
 
D-grammars must be uploaded to or provided directly at the tab '''d-rules''' in [[IAN]].

Revision as of 12:53, 5 September 2012

The English disambiguation grammars, or English d-grammars, are a part of the English grammar and are used to improve the results of the tokenization and to control the application of t-rules. They follow the formalism described at UNL Grammar Specs and are used both in natural language analysis (UNLization) and in natural language generation (NLization).

Contents

UNLization

In natural language analysis, the d-grammar is used to control the tokenization of the English sentences, i.e., to prevent wrong lexical choices and to induce the best matches. The d-grammar comprises two different types of disambiguation rules, or d-rules:

  • Negative (blocking) rules, where the probability is equal to 0, prevent lexical choices
    For instance, the rule (D)(BLK)(V)=0; informs that the sequence determiner+blank space+verb is not allowed, i.e., there cannot be a determiner before a verb.
  • Positive rules, where the probability is more than 0, force lexical choices
    For instance, the rule (['s],V)(BLK)(GER)=1; informs that the entry ['s] as a verb is to be preferred before a gerund (there are three entries ['s] in the dictionary: the contracted form of "is", the particle used to form the genitive and a plural suffix; if this rule is not stated, the system would simply select the first one appearing in the dictionary with the highest frequency)

File

The English d-grammar may be downloaded from eng_ana_dgrammar.txt. The complete English d-grammar may be exported from the UNLarium: UNLWEB>UNLARIUM>GRAMMAR>ENGLISH>EXPORT.

How to use d-grammars

D-grammars must be uploaded to or provided directly at the tab d-rules in IAN.

Examples of disambiguation rules

Preventing hyper-segmentation of temporary entries
"asdfg" must be tokenized as [asdfg] (one single temporary entry) instead of [as][dfg], which would be the case, because [as] is in the dictionary
(TEMP,^" ",^DIGIT,^W)(^" ",^STAIL)=0;
(a temporary word, i.e., a word not found in the dictionary, must be followed by a blank space or the end of the sentence)
(^" ",^PUT,^SHEAD)(TEMP,^" ",^W)=0;
(a temporary word, i.e., a word not found in the dictionary, must be preceded by a blank space, a punctuation sign or the beginning of the sentence)
(^DIGIT)({[st]|[nd]|[rd]|[th]})=0;
The subwords [st], [nd], [rd] and [th] may only appear after a number ("1st" or "tenth"). This prevents hyper-segmentation as in "asdfgst" = [asdfg][st], which would not be blocked by the rule above, because [st] is a suffix.
Determiners x pronouns
There are many ambiguities in the dictionary between determiners and pronouns. The string "that", for instance, is represented in the dictionary as a demonstrative determiner ("that book") and as a demonstrative pronoun ("that is the book"). The following rules help differentiating them:
(D,^AFT)({PUT|STAIL})=0;
Determiners cannot come at the end of the sentence, except if their distribution is AFT (after) ("He said that", but "There are books enough")
(D)(BLK)(V)=0;
Determiners cannot come before a verb ("That is the book")
Auxiliary verbs x main verbs
Many auxiliary verbs may also play the role of main verbs: "He has done that" ("has" is an auxiliary) x "He has a car" ("has" is the main verb). The following rule helps differentiating them:
(AUX,^COP)(BLK)(^V,^[not])=0;
Auxiliary verbs which are not copula must be followed by a verb or the adverb [not]
Software