Matthew Arnold, David Piorkowski, et al.
IBM J. Res. Dev
This paper presents a new method for resolving lexical (word sense) ambiguities inherent in natural language sentences. The Sentence Analyzer (SENA) was developed to resolve such ambiguities by using constraints and example-based preferences. The ambiguities are packed into a single dependency structure, and grammatical and lexical constraints are applied to it in order to reduce the degree of ambiguity. The application of constraints is realized by a very effective constraint-satisfaction technique. Remaining ambiguities are resolved by the use of preferences calculated from an example-base, which is a set of fully parsed word-to-word dependencies acquired semi-automatically from on-line dictionaries.
Matthew Arnold, David Piorkowski, et al.
IBM J. Res. Dev
Joxan Jaffar
Journal of the ACM
Rudra M. Tripathy, Amitabha Bagchi, et al.
Intelligent Data Analysis
Merve Unuvar, Yurdaer Doganata, et al.
CLOUD 2014