6,993 research outputs found
Language, logic and ontology: uncovering the structure of commonsense knowledge
The purpose of this paper is twofold: (i) we argue that the structure of commonsense knowledge must be discovered, rather than invented; and (ii) we argue that natural
language, which is the best known theory of our (shared) commonsense knowledge, should itself be used as a guide to discovering the structure of commonsense knowledge. In addition to suggesting a systematic method to the discovery of the structure of commonsense knowledge, the method we propose seems to also provide an explanation for a number of phenomena in natural language, such as metaphor, intensionality, and the semantics of nominal compounds. Admittedly, our ultimate goal is quite ambitious, and it is no less than the systematic ‘discovery’ of a well-typed
ontology of commonsense knowledge, and the subsequent formulation of the longawaited goal of a meaning algebra
Neural Natural Language Inference Models Enhanced with External Knowledge
Modeling natural language inference is a very challenging task. With the
availability of large annotated data, it has recently become feasible to train
complex models such as neural-network-based inference models, which have shown
to achieve the state-of-the-art performance. Although there exist relatively
large annotated data, can machines learn all knowledge needed to perform
natural language inference (NLI) from these data? If not, how can
neural-network-based NLI models benefit from external knowledge and how to
build NLI models to leverage it? In this paper, we enrich the state-of-the-art
neural natural language inference models with external knowledge. We
demonstrate that the proposed models improve neural NLI models to achieve the
state-of-the-art performance on the SNLI and MultiNLI datasets.Comment: Accepted by ACL 201
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