Results 81 to 90 of about 64,931 (224)
"I don't believe in word senses" [PDF]
Word sense disambiguation assumes word senses. Within the lexicography and linguistics literature, they are known to be very slippery entities. The paper looks at problems with existing accounts of `word sense' and describes the various kinds of ways in which a word's meaning can deviate from its core meaning.
arxiv
Word Sense Disambiguation for 158 Languages using Word Embeddings Only [PDF]
Disambiguation of word senses in context is easy for humans, but is a major challenge for automatic approaches. Sophisticated supervised and knowledge-based models were developed to solve this task. However, (i) the inherent Zipfian distribution of supervised training instances for a given word and/or (ii) the quality of linguistic knowledge ...
arxiv
Gaze‐Aware Visualisation: Design Considerations and Research Agenda
We assemble a design framework for gaze‐aware visualisations along four axes—measurable data, inferable data, opportunities for support, and limiting factors to beware—and distil visualisation research challenges that preclude such systems. We show how our framework can be applied in practice to consider how eye‐tracking may benefit visualisation ...
R. Jianu+5 more
wiley +1 more source
The incidence and persistence of partnerships in a British industrial city: Glasgow, 1861–81
Abstract This paper examines the prevalence of business partnerships in a late‐nineteenth‐century British city, using individual‐level data from post office directories and censuses. Focusing on Glasgow, we present a detailed picture of partnership number and type, demographic characteristics of the entrepreneurs who ran them, and how these businesses ...
Graeme Acheson+3 more
wiley +1 more source
Exploring Resources in Word Sense Disambiguation for Marathi Language [PDF]
Hemant Darbari+4 more
openaire +2 more sources
Abstract Two theories dominate the current debate over the nature of verbal irony: the pretence theory and the echoic theory. It is common ground in this debate that irony is sometimes both echoic and enacted through pretence; my concern here is with such cases.
Gregory Currie
wiley +1 more source
No Self‐Reference, No Ownership?
Abstract A ‘no‐ownership’ or ‘no‐self theory’ holds that there is no proper subject of experience; the ownership of experience can only be accounted for by invoking a sub‐personal entity. In the recent self‐versus‐no‐self debate, it is widely assumed that the no‐referent view of ‘I’, which is closely associated with Wittgenstein and G. E. M.
Bernhard Ritter
wiley +1 more source
EmojiNet: Building a Machine Readable Sense Inventory for Emoji [PDF]
Emoji are a contemporary and extremely popular way to enhance electronic communication. Without rigid semantics attached to them, emoji symbols take on different meanings based on the context of a message. Thus, like the word sense disambiguation task in natural language processing, machines also need to disambiguate the meaning or sense of an emoji ...
arxiv
Enhancing Adverse Event Reporting With Clinical Language Models: Inpatient Falls
ABSTRACT Aims To develop a method for computationally detecting fall events using clinical language models to complement existing self‐reporting mechanisms. Design Retrospective observational study. Methods Text data were collected from the unstructured nursing notes of three hospitals' electronic health records and the Korean national patient safety ...
Insook Cho+3 more
wiley +1 more source
Why is traditional polygamy unjust? Implications for egalitarian nonmonogamy
Abstract The notion of equality attracts both proponents and critics of nonmonogamy. Inequality is a widely discussed objection to nonmonogamy. Simultaneously, equality is highlighted as a core value in ethical nonmonogamy. The notions of equality and inequality in these debates have not been clearly conceptualized.
Perri Sriwannawit
wiley +1 more source