614 research outputs found

    Models to represent linguistic linked data

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    As the interest of the Semantic Web and computational linguistics communities in linguistic linked data (LLD) keeps increasing and the number of contributions that dwell on LLD rapidly grows, scholars (and linguists in particular) interested in the development of LLD resources sometimes find it difficult to determine which mechanism is suitable for their needs and which challenges have already been addressed. This review seeks to present the state of the art on the models, ontologies and their extensions to represent language resources as LLD by focusing on the nature of the linguistic content they aim to encode. Four basic groups of models are distinguished in this work: models to represent the main elements of lexical resources (group 1), vocabularies developed as extensions to models in group 1 and ontologies that provide more granularity on specific levels of linguistic analysis (group 2), catalogues of linguistic data categories (group 3) and other models such as corpora models or service-oriented ones (group 4). Contributions encompassed in these four groups are described, highlighting their reuse by the community and the modelling challenges that are still to be faced

    Database Models and Data Formats

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    The deliverable describes data structure and XML formats that have been investigated and defined for data representation of linguistic and semantic resources underlying the KYOTO system

    Language-independent link key-based data interlinking

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    david2015aInternational audienceLinks are important for the publication of RDF data on the web. Yet, establishing links between data sets is not an easy task. We develop an approach for that purpose which extracts weak link keys. Link keys extend the notion of a key to the case of different data sets. They are made of a set of pairs of properties belonging to two different classes. A weak link key holds between two classes if any resources having common values for all of these properties are the same resources. An algorithm is proposed to generate a small set of candidate link keys. Depending on whether some of the, valid or invalid, links are known, we define supervised and non supervised measures for selecting the appropriate link keys. The supervised measures approximate precision and recall, while the non supervised measures are the ratio of pairs of entities a link key covers (coverage), and the ratio of entities from the same data set it identifies (discrimination). We have experimented these techniques on two data sets, showing the accuracy and robustness of both approaches

    Predicate Matrix: an interoperable lexical knowledge base for predicates

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    183 p.La Matriz de Predicados (Predicate Matrix en inglés) es un nuevo recurso léxico-semántico resultado de la integración de múltiples fuentes de conocimiento, entre las cuales se encuentran FrameNet, VerbNet, PropBank y WordNet. La Matriz de Predicados proporciona un léxico extenso y robusto que permite mejorar la interoperabilidad entre los recursos semánticos mencionados anteriormente. La creación de la Matriz de Predicados se basa en la integración de Semlink y nuevos mappings obtenidos utilizando métodos automáticos que enlazan el conocimiento semántico a nivel léxico y de roles. Asimismo, hemos ampliado la Predicate Matrix para cubrir los predicados nominales (inglés, español) y predicados en otros idiomas (castellano, catalán y vasco). Como resultado, la Matriz de predicados proporciona un léxico multilingüe que permite el análisis semántico interoperable en múltiples idiomas

    Liage de données RDF : évaluation d'approches interlingues

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    The Semantic Web extends the Web by publishing structured and interlinked data using RDF.An RDF data set is a graph where resources are nodes labelled in natural languages. One of the key challenges of linked data is to be able to discover links across RDF data sets. Given two data sets, equivalent resources should be identified and linked by owl:sameAs links. This problem is particularly difficult when resources are described in different natural languages.This thesis investigates the effectiveness of linguistic resources for interlinking RDF data sets. For this purpose, we introduce a general framework in which each RDF resource is represented as a virtual document containing text information of neighboring nodes. The context of a resource are the labels of the neighboring nodes. Once virtual documents are created, they are projected in the same space in order to be compared. This can be achieved by using machine translation or multilingual lexical resources. Once documents are in the same space, similarity measures to find identical resources are applied. Similarity between elements of this space is taken for similarity between RDF resources.We performed evaluation of cross-lingual techniques within the proposed framework. We experimentally evaluate different methods for linking RDF data. In particular, two strategies are explored: applying machine translation or using references to multilingual resources. Overall, evaluation shows the effectiveness of cross-lingual string-based approaches for linking RDF resources expressed in different languages. The methods have been evaluated on resources in English, Chinese, French and German. The best performance (over 0.90 F-measure) was obtained by the machine translation approach. This shows that the similarity-based method can be successfully applied on RDF resources independently of their type (named entities or thesauri concepts). The best experimental results involving just a pair of languages demonstrated the usefulness of such techniques for interlinking RDF resources cross-lingually.Le Web des données étend le Web en publiant des données structurées et liées en RDF. Un jeu de données RDF est un graphe orienté où les ressources peuvent être des sommets étiquetées dans des langues naturelles. Un des principaux défis est de découvrir les liens entre jeux de données RDF. Étant donnés deux jeux de données, cela consiste à trouver les ressources équivalentes et les lier avec des liens owl:sameAs. Ce problème est particulièrement difficile lorsque les ressources sont décrites dans différentes langues naturelles.Cette thèse étudie l'efficacité des ressources linguistiques pour le liage des données exprimées dans différentes langues. Chaque ressource RDF est représentée comme un document virtuel contenant les informations textuelles des sommets voisins. Les étiquettes des sommets voisins constituent le contexte d'une ressource. Une fois que les documents sont créés, ils sont projetés dans un même espace afin d'être comparés. Ceci peut être réalisé à l'aide de la traduction automatique ou de ressources lexicales multilingues. Une fois que les documents sont dans le même espace, des mesures de similarité sont appliquées afin de trouver les ressources identiques. La similarité entre les documents est prise pour la similarité entre les ressources RDF.Nous évaluons expérimentalement différentes méthodes pour lier les données RDF. En particulier, deux stratégies sont explorées: l'application de la traduction automatique et l'usage des banques de données terminologiques et lexicales multilingues. Dans l'ensemble, l'évaluation montre l'efficacité de ce type d'approches. Les méthodes ont été évaluées sur les ressources en anglais, chinois, français, et allemand. Les meilleurs résultats (F-mesure > 0.90) ont été obtenus par la traduction automatique. L'évaluation montre que la méthode basée sur la similarité peut être appliquée avec succès sur les ressources RDF indépendamment de leur type (entités nommées ou concepts de dictionnaires)

    WordNets mapped to Central Ontology

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    The deliverable describes the progress that has been made toward ontologizing the OntoWordNet with respect to the ontological meta properties of rigidity and non-rigidty, and the progress that has been made toward mapping the Dutch, English, and Italian wordnets onto OntoWordNet. We give a typology of wordnet to ontology mappings, and finally we provide a preliminary discussion of cross lingual rigidity validation within the context of the KYOTO framework
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