Publication | Open Access
The chicken-and-egg problem in wordnet design: synonymy, synsets and constitutive relations
36
Citations
23
References
2013
Year
EngineeringWordnet ConstructionConstitutive RelationsLexical SemanticsSemantic WebSemanticsNatural Language ProcessingApplied LinguisticsSyntaxComputational LinguisticsLanguage StudiesPolish WordnetMachine TranslationWordnet DesignComputational LexicologyWord-sense DisambiguationDistributional SemanticsSemantic ComputingSemantic NetworkLexical ResourceAutomated ReasoningStylistic RegistersChicken-and-egg ProblemLinguisticsComputational SemanticsSemantic Representation
Wordnets are built of synsets, not of words. A synset consists of words. Synonymy is a relation between words. Words go into a synset because they are synonyms. Later, a wordnet treats words as synonymous because they belong in the same synset $$\ldots$$ Such circularity, a well-known problem, poses a practical difficulty in wordnet construction, notably when it comes to maintaining consistency. We propose to make a wordnet a net of words or, to be more precise, lexical units. We discuss our assumptions and present their implementation in a steadily growing Polish wordnet. A small set of constitutive relations allows us to construct synsets automatically out of groups of lexical units with the same connectivity. Our analysis includes a thorough comparative overview of systems of relations in several influential wordnets. The additional synset-forming mechanisms include stylistic registers and verb aspect.
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