Project Details
Distributional Approaches to Semantic Relatedness: Generalisation, Evaluation, Visualisation
Applicant
Professorin Dr. Sabine Schulte im Walde
Subject Area
General and Comparative Linguistics, Experimental Linguistics, Typology, Non-European Languages
Image and Language Processing, Computer Graphics and Visualisation, Human Computer Interaction, Ubiquitous and Wearable Computing
Image and Language Processing, Computer Graphics and Visualisation, Human Computer Interaction, Ubiquitous and Wearable Computing
Term
from 2011 to 2017
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 192349223
The project explores the potential and the limits of distributional approaches to lexical semantics within an interdisciplinary framework between theoretical, cognitive and computational linguistics. Relying on three test cases to distinguish various types of semantic relatedness, we bring together the tasks, approaches and results from the first project phase and study semantic relatedness from a meta-level perspective: We take "semantic relatedness" as a generic term subsuming paradigmatic relation pairs, compound-constituent pairs and sense relatedness across word types, and plan to (i) investigate distributional approaches across these types of semantic relatedness, across word classes, and across languages; (ii) explore the linguistic performance of soft clustering approaches, parameters, and evaluations to model ambiguity; (iii) exploit visualisation as a tool to assess semantic relatedness in distributional spaces; and (iv) abstract over semantic subcategorisation information and semantic evaluation for statistical machine translation as an extrinsic application. Across tasks and views, the distributional approaches continue to address two major challenges, (i) a theoretically and cognitively adequate selection of features to model word meaning and word relatedness, and (ii) modelling word meaning with respect to word senses, to address ambiguity.
DFG Programme
Research Grants