Lexical Disambiguation (CKBD): A Tool to Identify and Resolve Semantic Conflicts Using Context Knowledge

Author(s):  
Said Al Tahat ◽  
Kamsuriah Ahmad
Author(s):  
Christian von Soest ◽  
Alexander Stroh

Scholars often pay insufficient attention to bridging the research divide between different world regions. The authors argue that structured qualitative comparisons across world regions offer a sound middle ground for the integration of universal approaches and context knowledge. The chapter puts forward suggestions about how to deal with challenges in cross-area comparisons at the conceptual, methodological, and practical level. First, scholars should integrate region-centered academic discourses to foster conceptual advancement and empirical research, thereby overcoming the restricted horizons of specific knowledge communities. Second, systematic research designs and case-selection criteria should be aligned with area awareness to reap the benefits of cross-regional CAS. Third, the authors’ notion of “applied CAS” implies that practical considerations for successful comparative research must be understood as an important constituent of any successful research strategy. Cross-area comparisons are indispensable if social science aims to provide truly universal explanations in touch with the diverse realities of a globalized world.


2018 ◽  
Vol 46 (3) ◽  
pp. 355-416
Author(s):  
Marc Felfe

Abstract Sentences with a cognate object typically consist of an intransitive activity verb, its subject NP and a second NP in the accusative. Its nominal core is typically derived as nomen actionis and/or nomen acti from the verb. Essential questions are: How are cognate objects licensed? What role do they play in verbal activity? Which nouns and which verbs come into question? Can the reading of cognitive objects be predicted as an event or object? In this paper I will propose a constructional grammatical analysis. Different readings of the cognate object as well as the temporal constitution as a telic or atelic situation are explained within the construction by compositional processes. These are essentially analyzed as a transfer of the nominal reference mode to the entire VP. The nominal reference method also results from compositional processes within the NP. An important focus of the analysis is on overrides and adjustments (coercion) in case of semantic conflicts.


1997 ◽  
Vol 35 (5) ◽  
pp. 583-589 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Peru ◽  
Valentina Moro ◽  
Renato Avesani ◽  
Salvatore Aglioti

Author(s):  
Antonio L. Alfeo ◽  
Mario G. C. A. Cimino ◽  
Gigliola Vaglini

AbstractIn nowadays manufacturing, each technical assistance operation is digitally tracked. This results in a huge amount of textual data that can be exploited as a knowledge base to improve these operations. For instance, an ongoing problem can be addressed by retrieving potential solutions among the ones used to cope with similar problems during past operations. To be effective, most of the approaches for semantic textual similarity need to be supported by a structured semantic context (e.g. industry-specific ontology), resulting in high development and management costs. We overcome this limitation with a textual similarity approach featuring three functional modules. The data preparation module provides punctuation and stop-words removal, and word lemmatization. The pre-processed sentences undergo the sentence embedding module, based on Sentence-BERT (Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers) and aimed at transforming the sentences into fixed-length vectors. Their cosine similarity is processed by the scoring module to match the expected similarity between the two original sentences. Finally, this similarity measure is employed to retrieve the most suitable recorded solutions for the ongoing problem. The effectiveness of the proposed approach is tested (i) against a state-of-the-art competitor and two well-known textual similarity approaches, and (ii) with two case studies, i.e. private company technical assistance reports and a benchmark dataset for semantic textual similarity. With respect to the state-of-the-art, the proposed approach results in comparable retrieval performance and significantly lower management cost: 30-min questionnaires are sufficient to obtain the semantic context knowledge to be injected into our textual search engine.


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