핵심 개념
ChainNet is a new lexical resource that explicitly identifies the structured relationships between word senses, including metaphorical and metonymic connections, in the Open English WordNet.
초록
The content presents ChainNet, a new lexical resource that formalizes the structured relationships between word senses in WordNet. Key highlights:
- Words can exhibit polysemy, where a single word has multiple distinct meanings. These meanings can be related through metaphor or metonymy, or they can be completely unrelated (homonymy).
- ChainNet represents these relationships, with every nominal sense of a word being either a prototypical sense or derived from another sense via metaphor or metonymy.
- For metaphorical extensions, ChainNet also records the feature transformations that occur, capturing how the meaning changes.
- The authors collected annotations for 6,500 words in WordNet using three annotators, and report on the inter- and intra-annotator agreement for the task.
- The authors also present two baseline models for the task of "polysemy parsing", which aims to automatically synthesize ChainNet annotations for the rest of WordNet.
- The authors reflect on insights gained from applying the theory of chaining to real-world data, including the prevalence of "multistable" word meanings and the distinction between cognitive and etymological chains.
통계
"March always has dreadful rainfall!"
"The infantry performed a militant march."
"The march approached the town hall."
"Nothing can stop the march of science."
인용구
"Chaining can cause word meaning to extend into disjointed areas of semantic space (Austin, 1961, p. 72): the academic progress in (4) and the regimented walking in (2) have little in common, even though they are connected in a chain."
"Unlike other metaphor resources, ChainNet provides a representation of the meaning change that is caused by each metaphor. This takes the form of a feature transformation."