Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Discovery of Manner Relations and their Applicability to Question Answering Roxana Girju 1,2, Manju Putcha 1, and Dan Moldovan 1 University of Texas at.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Discovery of Manner Relations and their Applicability to Question Answering Roxana Girju 1,2, Manju Putcha 1, and Dan Moldovan 1 University of Texas at."— Presentation transcript:

1 Discovery of Manner Relations and their Applicability to Question Answering Roxana Girju 1,2, Manju Putcha 1, and Dan Moldovan 1 University of Texas at Dallas 1 Baylor University 2 ACL Workshop on Multilingual Summarization and Question Answering, 2003

2 Manner Relation An example: We want to work together to build our new economy, creating jobs by investing in technology so America can continue to lead the world in growth and opportunity. Q: How do Democrats want to build the economy? A: by creating jobs Q: How do Democrats want to create jobs? A: by investing in technology

3 Manner Relation (Cont.) In WordNet, the manner relation is defined as a way of acting or behaving. There are different ways of expressing manner. A possible way to check: answer to “ In what manner/how ? ” “ He runs quickly. ” vs. “ How hoes he run? ” but not to “ Where ? ”, or “ When ? ” “ He runs on the field. ”, “ He runs quite often. ”

4 Lexico-Syntactic Patterns Expressing Manner The most frequently occurring form of manner is as a semantic role (Quirk et al., 1985). Manner is encoded as a relationship between a verb and one of its arguments. One of the most frequently used patterns expressing manner is verb-adverb. Adverbs can be further classified as follows:

5 Manner Expressing (Cont.) Verb-Adverb Patterns Adverbs of manner that end in “ -ly ” Adverbs of manner that do not end in “ -ly ” Quality description adverbs: fast, good, well Adverbial expressions as much as 60% faster, louder than ever Compound adverbs of manner radio-style, tax-free Foreign adverbial expressions a la Gorbachev, en masse

6 Manner Expressing (Cont.) Other forms of manner relations (1) complex nominals (fast car), (2) verbs of implicit manner (for example whisper is a manner of speaking), (3) verb-PP (I took your coat by mistake) (4) verb-NP (He breathed a deep breath) (5) verb clauses (I cook vegetables as Chinese do)

7 Manner Expressing (Cont.) All these lexico-syntactic patterns are ambiguous. In this paper we focus only on the discovery of manner semantic roles expressed as verb-adverb pairs. The method, however, is extendable to many other manner forms and even to other semantic relations.

8 Approach Supervised learning Naive Bayes Classifier approach Adverb Dictionary (as reference) Adverbs in WordNet with a gloss like “ in a ~~ manner ” Adverbs that are annotated in TreeBank as MNR adverb-verb pairs

9 Features

10 Features (Cont.) (1) Specific adverb statistics Whether the adverb is in Adverb Dictionary or not. Statistics is the occurrences in training data. (2) Parent phrase type The syntactic tag of the parent of the adverb (3) Whether or not Adverb is present in the Dictionary The same as (1), but the statistics is the probability of being a manner adverb in the Adverb Dictionary.

11 Features (Cont.) (4) Distance between verb and adverb Counted as words between them (5) Component before the adverb The syntactic roles before the adverb. (6) Component after the adverb The syntactic roles after the adverb. (7) Adverb ends in “ ly ” True or false

12 Estimating Probabilities Class prior probabilities: Portion of positive (V j =1) or negative (V j =0) examples in the training data Class conditional probability (of each feature): pos_freq: occurrences of the feature in positive class VOCAB, TEXT: the distinct and total numbers of instances for the feature

13 Naive Bayes Classifier V nb is the output of the Naive Bayes Classifier, v j is the class in the target set V={+,-} f i are the individual features from the set F of the seven features. P(f i /+)=Prob(+) for f i P(f i /-)=Prob(-) for f i The classifier will generate a Look-Up table for classification use.

14 Training and Test Corpus Positive examples: ADVP-MNR annotations from Treebank2 (UPenn ’ s) Training:Testing=3:1

15 First Experiment Training = (1176 Positive + 2546 Negative) = 3722 examples Testing = (507 Positive + 1183 Negative) =1690 examples. Output of the program: Prior Positive Probability = 0.315959162 Prior Negative Probability = 0.684040838 Precision = 191/242 = 78.92% Recall = 191/507 = 37.62%

16 Second Experiment Some adverbs which always indicate in one class were removed. Negative: moreover, then, thus Positive: much, very, so

17 Application to Question Answering For questions tagged as MNR First locate the paragraph where the potential answer is in, Then identify the MNR tag in that paragraph. Q: How did Bob Marley die? A: Bob Marley died [of Melanoma][MNR]. Q: How was little Johnny dressed last night? A: Dressed [in a cowboy style][MNR], Johnny walked proudly on the street.

18 Conclusion The method presented in this paper for the detection and validation of manner relations is automatic and novel. Main flaw: Naive Bayes Classifier assumes feature independence But most features here are dependent on each other (except 1 and 4).


Download ppt "Discovery of Manner Relations and their Applicability to Question Answering Roxana Girju 1,2, Manju Putcha 1, and Dan Moldovan 1 University of Texas at."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google