Lexical Co-Occurrence Statistic
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A Lexical Co-Occurrence Statistic is a corpus co-occurrence statistic for a lexical co-occurrence.
- AKA: Term Co-Occurrence Statistic, Word Cooccurrence Statistic.
- Context:
- It can be references by a Lexical Co-Occurrence Representation (such as a lexical co-occurrence matrix).
- Example(s):
- Counter-Example(s):
- See: Amino Acid Co-Occurrence, Nucleotide Co-Occurrence.
References
2015
- (Wikipedia, 2015) ⇒ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/co-occurrence Retrieved:2015-2-8.
- Co-occurrence or cooccurrence is a linguistics term that can either mean concurrence / coincidence or, in a more specific sense, the above-chance frequent occurrence of two terms from a text corpus alongside each other in a certain order. Co-occurrence in this linguistic sense can be interpreted as an indicator of semantic proximity or an idiomatic expression. In contrast to collocation, co-occurrence assumes interdependency of the two terms. A co-occurrence restriction is identified when linguistic elements never occur together. Analysis of these restrictions can lead to discoveries about the structure and development of a language.
2003
- (Lin & Hovy, 2003) ⇒ Chin-Yew Lin, and Eduard Hovy. (2003). “Automatic Evaluation of Summaries Using N-gram Co-occurrence Statistics.” In: Proceedings of the 2003 Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics on Human Language Technology. doi:10.3115/1073445.1073465
2002
- (Doddington, 2002) ⇒ George Doddington. (2002). “Automatic Evaluation of Machine Translation Quality Using n-Gram Co-occurrence Statistics. In: Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Human Language Technology Research (HLT 2002).
2001
- (Jacquemin, 2001) ⇒ Christian Jacquemin. (2001). “Spotting and Discovering Terms Through Natural Language Processing." MIT Press. ISBN:0262100851
- QUOTE: A statistical measure of co-occurrence is a statistical measure of the co-occurrences of two or more words in a fixed-length text window.
1998
- (Roark & Charniak, 1998) ⇒ Brian Roark, and Eugene Charniak. (1998). “Noun-Phrase Co-occurrence Statistics for Semiautomatic Semantic Lexicon Construction.” In: Proceedings of the 17th International Conference on Computational linguistics doi:10.3115/980432.980751