Calculating shades of meaning in semantic spaces


Autoria(s): Novakovic, David Petar
Data(s)

2008

Resumo

This thesis introduces the problem of conceptual ambiguity, or Shades of Meaning (SoM) that can exist around a term or entity. As an example consider President Ronald Reagan the ex-president of the USA, there are many aspects to him that are captured in text; the Russian missile deal, the Iran-contra deal and others. Simply finding documents with the word “Reagan” in them is going to return results that cover many different shades of meaning related to "Reagan". Instead it may be desirable to retrieve results around a specific shade of meaning of "Reagan", e.g., all documents relating to the Iran-contra scandal. This thesis investigates computational methods for identifying shades of meaning around a word, or concept. This problem is related to word sense ambiguity, but is more subtle and based less on the particular syntactic structures associated with or around an instance of the term and more with the semantic contexts around it. A particularly noteworthy difference from typical word sense disambiguation is that shades of a concept are not known in advance. It is up to the algorithm itself to ascertain these subtleties. It is the key hypothesis of this thesis that reducing the number of dimensions in the representation of concepts is a key part of reducing sparseness and thus also crucial in discovering their SoMwithin a given corpus.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/37313/

Publicador

Queensland University of Technology

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/37313/1/David_Novakovic_Thesis.pdf

Novakovic, David Petar (2008) Calculating shades of meaning in semantic spaces. Masters by Research thesis, Queensland University of Technology.

Fonte

Faculty of Science and Technology

Palavras-Chave #meaning, semantics
Tipo

Thesis