Coreferring Noun Phrase
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A Coreferring Noun Phrase is a noun phrase that is a coreferent entity mention.
- See: Pronoun.
References
2001
- (Soon et al., 2001) ⇒ Wee Meng Soon, Hwee Tou Ng, Daniel Chung Yong Lim. (2001). “A Machine Learning Approach to Coreference Resolution of Noun Phrases.” In: Computational Linguistics, 27(4). doi:10.1162/089120101753342653
- QUOTE: Specifically, a coreference relation denotes an identity of reference and holds between two textual elements known as markables, which can be definite noun phrases, demonstrative noun phrases, proper names, appositives, sub-noun phrases that act as modifiers, pronouns, and so on. Thus, our coreference task resolves general noun phrases and is not restricted to a certain type of noun phrase such as pronouns. Also, we do not place any restriction on the possible candidate markables; that is, all markables, whether they are “organization," “person," or other entity types, are considered. The ability to link coreferring noun phrases both within and across sentences is critical to discourse analysis and language understanding in general.