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Aravind Joshi
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Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
Computational Linguistics (2015) 41 (4): 723–726.
Published: 01 December 2015
Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
Computational Linguistics (2014) 40 (4): 921–950.
Published: 01 December 2014
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Abstract
View articletitled, Reflections on the Penn Discourse TreeBank, Comparable Corpora, and Complementary Annotation
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for article titled, Reflections on the Penn Discourse TreeBank, Comparable Corpora, and Complementary Annotation
The Penn Discourse Treebank (PDTB) was released to the public in 2008. It remains the largest manually annotated corpus of discourse relations to date. Its focus on discourse relations that are either lexically-grounded in explicit discourse connectives or associated with sentential adjacency has not only facilitated its use in language technology and psycholinguistics but also has spawned the annotation of comparable corpora in other languages and genres. Given this situation, this paper has four aims: (1) to provide a comprehensive introduction to the PDTB for those who are unfamiliar with it; (2) to correct some wrong (or perhaps inadvertent) assumptions about the PDTB and its annotation that may have weakened previous results or the performance of decision procedures induced from the data; (3) to explain variations seen in the annotation of comparable resources in other languages and genres, which should allow developers of future comparable resources to recognize whether the variations are relevant to them; and (4) to enumerate and explain relationships between PDTB annotation and complementary annotation of other linguistic phenomena. The paper draws on work done by ourselves and others since the corpus was released.
Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
Computational Linguistics (2003) 29 (4): 545–587.
Published: 01 December 2003
Abstract
View articletitled, Anaphora and Discourse Structure
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for article titled, Anaphora and Discourse Structure
We argue in this article that many common adverbial phrases generally taken to signal a discourse relation between syntactically connected units within discourse structure instead work anaphorically to contribute relational meaning, with only indirect dependence on discourse structure. This allows a simpler discourse structure to provide scaffolding for compositional semantics and reveals multiple ways in which the relational meaning conveyed by adverbial connectives can interact with that associated with discourse structure. We conclude by sketching out a lexicalized grammar for discourse that facilitates discourse interpretation as a product of compositional rules, anaphor resolution, and inference.