Elicitation Corpus - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 11
About This Presentation
Title:

Elicitation Corpus

Description:

Snum-s, stype-prop, sanim-an, scount-na, sdef-def, vtype-perc, vtime-past, onum ... Feature: evidential or deontic (obligation) Features that aren't used in English ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:40
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 12
Provided by: loril8
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Elicitation Corpus


1
Elicitation Corpus
  • April 12, 2003

2
Agenda
  • Tagging with feature vectors or feature
    structures
  • Combinatorics
  • Extensions

3
Annotating the corpus
  • Feature Vectors
  • Maria saw the girls.
  • Snum-s, stype-prop, sanim-an, scount-na,
    sdef-def, vtype-perc, vtime-past, onum-pl,
    odef-def, etc.
  • Feature Structures
  • ((SUBJ ((num sg) (type prop) (anim an) (count na)
    (def def))) (vtype perc) (vtime past) (OBJ
    ((etc.
  • These are easy they come right out of the parser.

4
Adapting parser output
  • Do we need to filter out irrelevant features?
  • E.g., features about have and be to make the
    English auxiliary system work.
  • E.g., (AUX- TYPE) have

5
Not covered by the parser
  • Derived features
  • does the subject outrank the object in animacy?
  • Constructional features
  • Counterfactual conditional If I had gone, I
    would have seen him.
  • Do we want to extend the parsing grammar to label
    these automatically?
  • Discourse/semantic/context features
  • Context Who saw John?
  • Elicitation sentence Bill saw John.
  • Feature subject is new information.
  • Elicitation sentence He must see it.
  • Feature evidential or deontic (obligation)
  • Features that arent used in English
  • Context weyou and me (inclusive we)
  • Elicitation sentence We are tall.

6
Example of Combinatorics subject verb agreement
  • five numbers (singular, plural, dual, trial,
    paucal)
  • three genders (masculine, feminine, and neuter,
    and more for Bantu languages)
  • four persons (first, second, third, and fourth),
  • several levels of animacy (animate, inanimate,
    first and second person, third person)
  • two levels of definiteness (definite and
    indefinite)
  • huge number of tenses and aspects (present, past,
    future, non-past, non-future, near past, remote
    past, near future, remote future, continuous,
    perfective, etc.).

Two steps? (1) Which features are involved? (2)
Which values are involved?
7
Example of combinatorics determiners and
possessive pronouns
  • See handout.

8
Current Coverage of the Elicitation Corpus
  • Basic word order intransitive verb and subject
    transitive verb with subject and object noun
    phrase with determiners, adjectives, an
    possessors.
  • Definiteness and animacy special treatment of
    indefinite subjects, inanimate subjects, definite
    direct objects, animate direct objects, and
    sentences where the object outranks the subject
    in definiteness or animacy.
  • Agreeement (in number, gender, person, etc.)
    subject and verb object and verb determiner and
    noun adjective and noun possessor and noun
    relative pronoun and noun.
  • Possessive NPs with inalienable possession
    (body parts) kinship terms alienable
    possession pronominal possessors full NP
    possessors.
  • Inflectional Features gender, number, person,
    case, tense.

9
Not covered by the elicitation corpus
  • Subcategorization frames for major verb classes
    stative, change of state, change of location,
    change of possession, creation, filling and
    covering, experience, cognition, perception,
    saying and telling, causatives, etc.
  • Voice active, passive, and oblique voices.
  • Negation sentences and noun phrases
  • Relative clauses inflectional features of the
    relative pronoun possible locations of the gap
    headed or unheaded, etc.
  • Embedded clauses argument clauses adjunct
    clauses nominalized clauses.

10
Not Covered
  • Coordination sentences (switch reference and
    same subject), noun phrases, and other
    constituents.
  • Questions Yes-no questions (positive answer
    expected and negative answer expected)
  • Open questions (possible locations of gaps).
  • Other constructions comparatives, conditionals,
    causatives, desideratives, imperatives, possessor
    ascension, quantifier float, noun incorporation
    (polysynthesis).
  • Each of these has a few parameters to check
    e.g., does the causee come out in dative or
    accusative case can the incorporated noun take
    an unincorporated modifier which NPs can
    possessors ascend from/quantifiers float from,
    etc.
  • Further coverage of tense, aspect, and modality
    present, past, and future time ongoing and
    completed actions punctual and non-punctual
    activities habituality iteration realized and
    non-realized.
  • Cross product of these with lexical aspect
    state, activity, accomplishment, punctual.

11
Not Covered
  • Information structure treatment of topic (given
    information) and focus (new information),
    including clefted and topicalized sentences.
  • Other meanings that are typically
    grammaticalized yet, still, only, distributive
    (each), etc.
  • Other noun phrase phenomena quantification,
    deictic determiners, classifiers, etc.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com