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  • 本体与词汇库 黄居仁(Chu-Ren Huang) 等 编 著 专业科技 文轩网
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    • 作者: 黄居仁(Chu-Ren Huang) 等 编著
    • 出版社: 北京大学出版社
    • 出版时间:2014-12-01 00:00:00
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    商品参数
    • 作者: 黄居仁(Chu-Ren Huang) 等 编著
    • 出版社:北京大学出版社
    • 出版时间:2014-12-01 00:00:00
    • 版次:1
    • 印次:1
    • 印刷时间:2015-01-01
    • 字数:435000
    • 页数:339
    • 开本:16开
    • 装帧:平装
    • ISBN:9787301249543
    • 国别/地区:中国
    • 版权提供:北京大学出版社

    本体与词汇库

    作  者:黄居仁(Chu-Ren Huang) 等 编 著
    定  价:61
    出 版 社:北京大学出版社
    出版日期:2014年12月01日
    页  数:339
    装  帧:平装
    ISBN:9787301249543
    主编推荐

    《本体与词汇库——自然语言处理角度的解析(英文影印版)》关注如何整合词典资源和语义手段,内容涵盖理论和实践两个方面的研究成果,适用于对自然语言处理、计算语言学、心理语言学等感兴趣的研究者。

    内容简介

    本书是"计算语言学与语言科技原文丛书"中的一册。本书是全面论述本体知识库、词汇库以及两者界面建构的第一本专著,内容涵盖理论和实践两个方面的研究成果,对研究语言语义学、计算语言学和通过自然语言处理进行知识挖据以及本体建构的研究人员有重要参考价值。

    作者简介

    Chu-Ren Huang,香港理工大学教授,文学院院长。

    精彩内容

        There are also works which take words or terms as objects.In Cimiano et al,2003, verb-object dependencies were extracted from texts where the headword of a grammatical object was considered an FCA object and the corresponding verb together with the postfix 'able' were used as attributes, In Marek et al,2004, only adjectives were chosen as attributes because for the chosen snull

    目录
    导读 1
    Contributors 17
    Preface 23
    Part I Fundamental aspects 1
    1 Ontology and the lexicon: a multidisciplinary perspective 3
    1.1 Situating ontologies and lexical resources 3
    1.2 The content of ontologies 10
    1.3 Theoretical framework for the
    ontologies/lexicons interface 14
    1.4 From ontologies to the lexicon and back 21
    1.5 Outline of chapters 23
    2 Formal ontology as interlingua: the SUMO and
    WordNet linking project and global WordNet 25
    2.1 WordNet 25
    2.2 Principles of construction of formal ontologies
    and lexicons 29
    2.3 Mappings 30
    2.4 Interpreting language 32
    2.5 Global WordNet 33
    2.6 SUMO translation templates 35
    3 Interfacing WordNet with DOLCE: towards OntoWordNet 36
    3.1 Introduction 36
    3.2 WordNet’s preliminary analysis 37
    3.3 The DOLCE upper ontology 39
    3.4 Mapping WordNet into DOLCE 48
    3.5 Conclusion 52
    4 Reasoning over natural language text by means of FrameNet and ontologies 53
    4.1 Introduction 53
    4.2 An introduction to the FrameNet lexicon 54
    4.3 Linking FrameNet to ontologies for reasoning 56
    4.4 Formalizing FrameNet in OWL DL 57
    4.5 Reasoning over FrameNet-annotated text 62
    4.6 Linking FrameNet to SUMO 66
    4.7 Discussion 69
    4.8 Conclusion and outlook 70
    5 Synergizing ontologies and the lexicon: a roadmap 72
    5.1 Formal mappings between ontologies 72
    5.2 Evaluation of ontolex resources 73
    5.3 Bridging different lexical models and resources 75
    5.4 Technological framework 77
    Part II Discovery and representation of conceptual systems 79
    6 Experiments of ontology construction with Formal Concept Analysis 81
    6.1 Introduction 81
    6.2 Basic concepts and related work 82
    6.3 Dataset selection and design of experiments 86
    6.4 Evaluation and discussion 92
    6.5 Conclusion and future work 96
    7 Ontology, lexicon, and fact repository as leveraged to interpret events of change 98
    7.1 Introduction 98
    7.2 A snapshot of OntoSem 100
    7.3 Motivation for pursuing deep analysis of events of change 101
    7.4 Increase 102
    7.5 Content divorced from its rendering 114
    7.6 NLP with reasoning and for reasoning 117
    7.7 Conclusion 118
    8 Hantology: conceptual system discovery based on orthographic convention 122
    8.1 Introduction: hanzi and conventionalized conceptualization 122
    8.2 General framework 126
    8.3 Conceptualization and classification of the radicals system 128
    8.4 The ontology of a radical as a semantic symbol 132
    8.5 The architecture of Hantology 133
    8.6 OWL encoding of Hantology 137
    8.7 Summary 139
    8.8 Conclusion 142
    9 What’s in a schema? 144
    9.1 Introduction 144
    9.2 An ontology for cognitive linguistics 146
    9.3 The c.DnS ontology 148
    9.4 Schemata, mental spaces, and constructions 161
    9.5 An embodied semiotic metamodel 166
    9.6 Applying Semion to FrameNet and related resources 169
    9.7 Conclusion 181
    Part III Interfacing ontologies and lexical resources 183
    10 Interfacing ontologies and lexical resources 185
    10.1 Introduction 185
    10.2 Classifying experiments in ontologies and lexical resources 185
    10.3 Ontologies and their construction 188
    10.4 How actual resources fit the classification 190
    10.5 Two practical examples 194
    10.6 Available tools for the ontology lexical resource interface 196
    10.7 Conclusion 200
    11 Sinica BOW (Bilingual Ontological WordNet):integration of bilingual WordNet and SUMO 201
    11.1 Background and motivation 201
    11.2 Resources and structure required in the BOW approach 202
    11.3 Interfacing multiple resources: a lexicon-driven approach 204
    11.4 Integration of multiple knowledge sources 207
    11.5 Updating and future improvements 209
    11.6 Conclusion 210
    12 Ontology-based semantic lexicons:mapping between terms and object descriptions 212
    12.1 Introduction 212
    12.2 Why we need semantic lexicons 213
    12.3 More semantics than we need 215
    12.4 The semantics we need is in ontologies 218
    12.5 Conclusion 223
    13 Merging global and specialized linguistic ontologies 224
    13.1 Introduction 224
    13.2 Linguistic ontologies versus formal ontologies 226
    13.3 Specialized linguistic ontologies 229
    13.4 The plug-in approach 230
    13.5 Experiments 236
    13.6 Applications and extensions 237
    13.7 Conclusion 238
    Part IV Learning and using ontological knowledge 239
    14 The life cycle of knowledge 241
    14.1 Introduction 241
    14.2 Using ontolexical knowledge in NLP 242
    14.3 Creating ontolexical knowledge with NLP 249
    14.4 Conclusion 256
    15 The Omega ontology 258
    15.1 Introduction 258
    15.2 Constituents of Omega 258
    15.3 Structure of Omega 260
    15.4 Construction of Omega via merging 263
    15.5 Omega’s auxiliary knowledge sources 264
    15.6 Applications 266
    15.7 Omega 5 and the OntoNotes project 267
    15.8 Discussion and future work 268
    15.9 Conclusion 269
    16 Automatic acquisition of lexico-semantic knowledge for question answering 271
    16.1 Introduction 271
    16.2 Lexico-semantic knowledge for QA 272
    16.3 Related work 274
    16.4 Extracting semantically similar words 275
    16.5 Using automatically acquired role and function words 279
    16.6 Using automatically acquired categorized NEs 280
    16.7 Evaluation 283
    16.8 Conclusion and future work 286
    17 Agricultural ontology construction and maintenance in Thai 288
    17.1 Introduction 288
    17.2 A framework of ontology construction and maintenance 290
    17.3 Ontology acquisition from texts 291
    17.4 Ontology acquisitions from a dictionary and a thesaurus 301
    17.5 Integration into an ontological tree 306
    17.6 Conclusion 307
    References 309
    Index 335

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