Unambiguous Referencer
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An Unambiguous Referencer is a referencer that can be simply mapped to the correct referent.
- Context:
- It can have sufficient Reference Information for an Agent to map the Reference to a Referent.
- It can be the output of a Referencer Grounding Task.
- Example(s):
- A URL, such as:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reference
orhttp://www.gabormelli.com/RKB/Unambiguous_Referencer
- a Canonical Bibliographic Citation.
- an Unambiguous Named Entity Mention.
- An implicit person mention, such as: “Did you see [the king of pop] on MTV yesterday?”, if the audience is a North American from the late 1980s
- an Unambiguous Fact.
- an Unambiguous Question.
- …
- A URL, such as:
- Counter-Example(s):
- an Ambiguous Referencer, such as
- See: Formal Specification, Unambiguous Definition, Formal Specification.
References
2009
- (WordNet, 2009) ⇒ http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=unambiguous
- S: (adj) unambiguous (having or exhibiting a single clearly defined meaning) "As a horror, apartheid...is absolutely unambiguous"- Mario Vargas Llosa
- S: (adj) unequivocal, univocal, unambiguous (admitting of no doubt or misunderstanding; having only one meaning or interpretation and leading to only one conclusion) "unequivocal evidence"; "took an unequivocal position"; "an unequivocal success"; "an unequivocal promise"; "an unequivocal (or univocal) statement"
- http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/unambiguous#Adjective
- unambiguous (comparative more unambiguous, superlative most unambiguous)
- 1. clear, and having no uncertainty or ambiguity
- unambiguous (comparative more unambiguous, superlative most unambiguous)
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambiguity
- Ambiguity is the property of being ambiguous, where a word, term, notation, sign, symbol, phrase, sentence, or any other form used for communication, is called ambiguous if it can be interpreted in more than one way. Ambiguity is different from vagueness, which arises when the boundaries of meaning are indistinct. Ambiguity is context-dependent: the same linguistic item (be it a word, phrase, or sentence) may be ambiguous in one context and unambiguous in another context. For a word, ambiguity typically refers to an unclear choice between different definitions as may be found in a dictionary. A sentence may be ambiguous due to different ways of parsing the same sequence of words.