Lexically-based Relation Mention Recognition Structure
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A Lexically-based Relation Mention Recognition Structure is a linguistic relation recognition structure that is a textual pattern (which uses only lexical information (e.g. words, POS and/or concept type) to detect and classify a relation mention).
- AKA: Textual Relation Recognizer.
- Context:
- It can be expressed as a Shallow Parse Pattern, such as “NP is a part of NP”.
- It is a type of Mention Pattern.
- It can range from being a Textual Relation Pattern to being a Spoken Relation Pattern.
- Example(s):
- a Wrapper Pattern.
- a Five-Tuple Lexically-based Relation Recognition Classifier.
- a Hearst Pattern, such as:
[<NAMED ENTITY>-based <NAMED ENTITY>]
can find Organization_Headquarter_Location() relation mentions; but can also misclassify sentences such as "Florida Orange-based Heinz Marmalade".
- [Ø | <PROTEIN> | activity, found, in |<LOCATION> | Ø] can find the PL() relation in PPLRE Corpus 357.a.1.
- “NP is a part of NP” for the PartOf Relation.
- “NP is a kind of NP” for the IsA Relation.
- “NP is made of NP” for the MadeOf Relation.
- “NP is used for VP” for the UsedFor Relation.
- “NP can VP” for the CapableOf Relation.
- “NP wants to VP” for the DesireOf Relation.
- "You make NP by VP” for the CreatedBy Relation.
- "An example of NP is NP” for the InstanceOf Relation.
- “NP is part of NP” for the PartOf Relation.
- “NP is AP” for the PropertyOf Relation.
- "The effect of VP is NP|VP” for the EffectOf Relation.
[<Class Noun>(plural) such as <Noun>, and <Noun>]
can find Is_A() relations. (Hearst, 1992).
- …
- Counter-Example(s):
- See: Snowball Algorithm, DIPRE, ConceptNet Semantic Relation Ontology.
References
1992
- (Hearst, 1992).