Publication | Closed Access
Automatic detection of nocuous coordination ambiguities in natural language requirements
53
Citations
27
References
2010
Year
Unknown Venue
Semantic Role LabelingEngineeringSemanticsCoordination AmbiguityCorpus LinguisticsText MiningApplied LinguisticsNatural Language ProcessingSyntaxComputational LinguisticsLanguage EngineeringGrammarLanguage StudiesMachine TranslationNatural LanguageNocuous Coordination AmbiguitiesNocuous Ambiguity IdentificationGrammatical FormalismNlp TaskComputer ScienceInformation ExtractionSemantic ParsingAutomated ReasoningUnification GrammarLinguisticsComputational Semantics
Natural language is prevalent in requirements documents. However, ambiguity is an intrinsic phenomenon of natural language, and is therefore present in all such documents. Ambiguity occurs when a sentence can be interpreted differently by different readers. In this paper, we describe an automated approach for characterizing and detecting so-called nocuous ambiguities, which carry a high risk of misunderstanding among different readers. Given a natural language requirements document, sentences that contain specific types of ambiguity are first extracted automatically from the text. A machine learning algorithm is then used to determine whether an ambiguous sentence is nocuous or innocuous, based on a set of heuristics that draw on human judgments, which we collected as training data. We implemented a prototype tool for Nocuous Ambiguity Identification (NAI), in order to illustrate and evaluate our approach. The tool focuses on coordination ambiguity. We report on the results of a set of experiments to assess the performance and usefulness of the approach.
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