Unrestricted Bridging Resolution

In contrast to identity anaphors, which indicate coreference between a noun phrase and its antecedent, bridging anaphors link to their antecedent(s) via lexico-semantic, frame, or encyclopedic relations. Bridging resolution involves recognizing bridging anaphors and finding links to antecedents. In...

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Main Authors: Yufang Hou, Katja Markert, Michael Strube
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The MIT Press 2018-06-01
Series:Computational Linguistics
Online Access:https://www.mitpressjournals.org/doi/pdf/10.1162/coli_a_00315
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spelling doaj-d26d6c88abc04789bbf0da9c880bf0ab2020-11-25T01:10:57ZengThe MIT PressComputational Linguistics1530-93122018-06-0144223728410.1162/coli_a_00315coli_a_00315Unrestricted Bridging ResolutionYufang Hou0Katja Markert1Michael Strube2IBM Research Ireland. yhou@ie.ibm.comHeidelberg University, Department of Computational Linguistics. markert@cl.uni-heidelberg.deHeidelberg Institute for Theoretical Studies. michael.strube@h-its.orgIn contrast to identity anaphors, which indicate coreference between a noun phrase and its antecedent, bridging anaphors link to their antecedent(s) via lexico-semantic, frame, or encyclopedic relations. Bridging resolution involves recognizing bridging anaphors and finding links to antecedents. In contrast to most prior work, we tackle both problems. Our work also follows a more wide-ranging definition of bridging than most previous work and does not impose any restrictions on the type of bridging anaphora or relations between anaphor and antecedent. We create a corpus (ISNotes) annotated for information status (IS), bridging being one of the IS subcategories. The annotations reach high reliability for all categories and marginal reliability for the bridging subcategory. We use a two-stage statistical global inference method for bridging resolution. Given all mentions in a document, the first stage, bridging anaphora recognition, recognizes bridging anaphors as a subtask of learning fine-grained IS. We use a cascading collective classification method where (i) collective classification allows us to investigate relations among several mentions and autocorrelation among IS classes and (ii) cascaded classification allows us to tackle class imbalance, important for minority classes such as bridging. We show that our method outperforms current methods both for IS recognition overall as well as for bridging, specifically. The second stage, bridging antecedent selection, finds the antecedents for all predicted bridging anaphors. We investigate the phenomenon of semantically or syntactically related bridging anaphors that share the same antecedent, a phenomenon we call sibling anaphors. We show that taking sibling anaphors into account in a joint inference model improves antecedent selection performance. In addition, we develop semantic and salience features for antecedent selection and suggest a novel method to build the candidate antecedent list for an anaphor, using the discourse scope of the anaphor. Our model outperforms previous work significantly.https://www.mitpressjournals.org/doi/pdf/10.1162/coli_a_00315
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yufang Hou
Katja Markert
Michael Strube
spellingShingle Yufang Hou
Katja Markert
Michael Strube
Unrestricted Bridging Resolution
Computational Linguistics
author_facet Yufang Hou
Katja Markert
Michael Strube
author_sort Yufang Hou
title Unrestricted Bridging Resolution
title_short Unrestricted Bridging Resolution
title_full Unrestricted Bridging Resolution
title_fullStr Unrestricted Bridging Resolution
title_full_unstemmed Unrestricted Bridging Resolution
title_sort unrestricted bridging resolution
publisher The MIT Press
series Computational Linguistics
issn 1530-9312
publishDate 2018-06-01
description In contrast to identity anaphors, which indicate coreference between a noun phrase and its antecedent, bridging anaphors link to their antecedent(s) via lexico-semantic, frame, or encyclopedic relations. Bridging resolution involves recognizing bridging anaphors and finding links to antecedents. In contrast to most prior work, we tackle both problems. Our work also follows a more wide-ranging definition of bridging than most previous work and does not impose any restrictions on the type of bridging anaphora or relations between anaphor and antecedent. We create a corpus (ISNotes) annotated for information status (IS), bridging being one of the IS subcategories. The annotations reach high reliability for all categories and marginal reliability for the bridging subcategory. We use a two-stage statistical global inference method for bridging resolution. Given all mentions in a document, the first stage, bridging anaphora recognition, recognizes bridging anaphors as a subtask of learning fine-grained IS. We use a cascading collective classification method where (i) collective classification allows us to investigate relations among several mentions and autocorrelation among IS classes and (ii) cascaded classification allows us to tackle class imbalance, important for minority classes such as bridging. We show that our method outperforms current methods both for IS recognition overall as well as for bridging, specifically. The second stage, bridging antecedent selection, finds the antecedents for all predicted bridging anaphors. We investigate the phenomenon of semantically or syntactically related bridging anaphors that share the same antecedent, a phenomenon we call sibling anaphors. We show that taking sibling anaphors into account in a joint inference model improves antecedent selection performance. In addition, we develop semantic and salience features for antecedent selection and suggest a novel method to build the candidate antecedent list for an anaphor, using the discourse scope of the anaphor. Our model outperforms previous work significantly.
url https://www.mitpressjournals.org/doi/pdf/10.1162/coli_a_00315
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