Publication | Open Access
Generating Event Causality Hypotheses through Semantic Relations
41
Citations
29
References
2015
Year
Unseen Event CausalitiesEngineeringEvent Causality KnowledgeTextual EntailmentSemanticsSemantic WebCorpus LinguisticsCausal InferenceText MiningCausal Relation ExtractionNatural Language ProcessingEvent CausalitiesData ScienceComputational LinguisticsLanguage StudiesCausal ModelNlp TaskKnowledge DiscoveryCausal ReasoningInformation ExtractionSemantic ParsingEvent Causality HypothesesAutomated ReasoningLinguistics
Event causality knowledge is indispensable for intelligent natural language understanding. The problem is that any method for extracting event causalities from text is insufficient; it is likely that some event causalities that we can recognize in this world are not written in a corpus, no matter its size. We propose a method of hypothesizing unseen event causalities from known event causalities extracted from the web by the semantic relations between nouns. For example, our method can hypothesize "deploy a security camera" -> "avoid crimes" from "deploy a mosquito net" -> "avoid malaria" through semantic relation . Our experiments show that, from 2.4 million event causalities extracted from the web, our method generated more than 300,000 hypotheses, which were not in the input, with 70% precision. We also show that our method outperforms a state-of-the-art hypothesis generation method.
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