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Generation of Referring Expressions: the State of the Art SELLC Winter School, Guangzhou 2010 Kees van Deemter Computing Science University of Aberdeen.

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Presentation on theme: "Generation of Referring Expressions: the State of the Art SELLC Winter School, Guangzhou 2010 Kees van Deemter Computing Science University of Aberdeen."— Presentation transcript:

1 Generation of Referring Expressions: the State of the Art SELLC Winter School, Guangzhou 2010 Kees van Deemter Computing Science University of Aberdeen Guangzhou, Dec 2010

2 Open Questions in GRE Guangzhou, Dec 2010

3 Open Questions in GRE Your input is welcome! suggestions about other open questions? ideas about answering them Guangzhou, Dec 2010

4 OQ1: Reference in context How can existing GRE algorithms be adapted to produce appropriate references in a (discourse or) dialogue context? Much work exists on the choice between broad categories, e.g., pronoun vs. full NP vs demonstrative (Poesio et al; Piwek). This does not help to decide what NP to choose. Integration with GRE is needed. Pioneering accounts are available (Krahmer & Theune 2002, Siddharthan & Copestake 2004, Stoia et al 2007), but these are tentative and largely untested. Dialogue requires modelling of interaction between speaker and hearer (e.g., alignment and collaboration) Guangzhou, Dec 2010

5 OQ2 Issues regarding knowledge and belief How should mismatches in knowledge between Speaker and Hearer be modelled? GRE so far has kept epistemic operators implicit: all the information in the crucial part of the KB was shared. What if S and H differ? Guangzhou, Dec 2010

6 OQ2 Issues regarding mutual knowledge Two instances of this problem 1. Litmans airport scenario: What do you say to someone who needs to pick up a person from an airport? (Speaker does not know who the distractors are.) 2. Roman Kutlaks reference to famous people scenario: Someone asks Who is Chu Enlai?, or Who is Nelson Mandela? What should you say? (Who are the distractors? What is their salience?) Guangzhou, Dec 2010

7 Relevant to the simplifications made by current GRE algorithms. E.g.: The king of France (Frege/Russell/Strawson) Whoever it will be, the winner of this years Tour de France will be less proud than last years winner The winner of the lottery may win 20 million X believes that a witch...; Y believes that she.... (Geach? Groenendijk, Stokhof?) The man with the martini is the murderer, when its actually a soft drink (Donnellan) The ham sandwich is getting restless, by waitress who doesnt know customers name (Nunberg) Guangzhou, Dec 2010

8 More radical new departures needed? Consider texts about genuinely complex domains: We examine the problem of generating definite noun phrases that are appropriate referring expressions (Opening sentence of the abstract of D&R 1995.) Bushs Middle-East policies are a disaster. Even his closest aids have started to withdraw their support What do these NPs refer to? Is it realistic to want to generate them from a shared KB? Guangzhou, Dec 2010

9 OQ3: Incrementality Studies of the TUNA corpus suggest that incremental GRE can work very well...... but only if you have a good preference order How can good preference orders be found? Does every new domain require new empirical studies? Or are there general principles that underlie preference orders? (E.g., frequency or complexity of a property) Sometimes the extremity/unusualness of the values is more important than the attribute itself (cf. Hermann & Deutsch; Aberdeen Cameras study.) Psycholinguistic issue: Relation with realisation order? (Sedivy et al. 1999) Guangzhou, Dec 2010

10 OQ4: Hearer-oriented GRE Most work on reference in GRE has focussed on production. Exceptions: Paraboni et al. (2007). Preliminary study in first STEC (Belz & Gatt 2007). Khan et al. 2008. How might one build generators that optimise for the hearer? (High processing speed, low likelihood of errors) And what if it turns out that speakers are bad at this? The egocentricity debate If its practical GRE youre interested in then this allows GRE programs to do better than human speakers. Guangzhou, Dec 2010

11 OQ5 Multimodality How does textual GRE interact with non-linguistic issues, such as speech (e.g. pitch accent on given information; other prosodic issues; cf. Theunes thesis) pointing (e.g. Van der Sluis & Krahmer [to appear]) salience as determined by physical proximity (as well as textual recency, intrinsic importance of objects, etc.) facial expressions such as gaze, eyebrow movements. These and other issues to be explored in Krahmers VICI project on GRE (Tilburg, 2008-2012). Guangzhou, Dec 2010

12 OQ6 Realisation & Lexical Choice Much of what we discussed focusses on Content Determination But referring expressions require words and syntactic constructions as well! But surface phenomena can be difficult and interesting too Gatts exploration of lexical coherence Siddharthans work on lexical ambiguity Imtiaz Khans work on syntactic ambiguity Guangzhou, Dec 2010

13 OQ6 Realisation & Lexical Choice Siddharthan & Copestake (2004) observed: words can introduce ambiguities. E.g. The old president = the previous present, or the president who is old (i.e., aged) Khan: Syntax can be ambiguous as well: the man on the hill with the telescope the old men and women Guangzhou, Dec 2010

14 OQ6 Realisation & Lexical Choice One possible position: avoid all ambiguities. Khan: ambiguous strings are not only often generated, but sometimes also preferred by hearers the old men and women preferred over the old men and the old women Finding: surface ambiguities are balanced against other issues (e.g. brevity) Guangzhou, Dec 2010

15 OQ7 Reference in spacial domains There is preliminary work (e.g. by Gatt), based on simple domains What happens when you want to refer to an area of a country? Ross Turners PhD project (Aberdeen) Input: a set of points in Scotland where ice is predicted to hamper road traffic Example output: icy patches are expected in the North East and on high grounds Guangzhou, Dec 2010

16 OQ7 Reference in spacial domains Ross Turners PhD project (Aberdeen) Input: a set of points in Scotland where ice is predicted to hamper road traffic. (Each point is on a road.) Example output: Icy patches are expected in the North East and on high grounds This is GRE... but with a twist : it may not be necessary to include all target points it may not be necessary to exclude all other points Referential success becomes a graded affair! Guangzhou, Dec 2010

17 OQ8 Integration with the rest of NLG GRE is arguably the most mature area of NLG: Linguistic Realisation is the main other contender most GRE practitioners use the same assumptions the fact that the first NLG STEC focused on GRE confirms this Ultimately, the GRE problem is linguistically complete: if we had a flawless GRE algorithm then this algorithm could easily be transformed into an equally flawless algorithm for all of NLG... Guangzhou, Dec 2010

18 OQ8 Integration with the rest of NLG For example, John walks [S] (The person who) walks [ref NP] Or A man saw a girl with earrings [S] (The man who) saw a girl with earrings [ref NP] Or Someone saw a beautiful girl with incredibly elaborate jade earrings bought in Paris (...) [S] (The person who) saw a beautiful girl with incredibly elaborate jade earrings bought in Paris (...) [ref NP] Guangzhou, Dec 2010

19 OQ9: Integration between GRE and other areas of linguistics Integration with psycholinguistics: (NLG more generally: G.Kempen et al, A.Roelofs et al. Recent book by M.Guhe.) GRE: modest beginnings in Dale & Reiter 1995 (inspiration from Levelts book) CogSci 2009 workshop Bridging the gap between computational and psycholinguistic approaches to references Special Issue of the journal TopiCS. Guangzhou, Dec 2010

20 OQ10: Integration between GRE and other areas of linguistics Integration with syntax has so far been meagre interleaving of Linguistic Realisation and Content Determination (Stone & Webber 1998; Krahmer & Theune 2002) Guangzhou, Dec 2010

21 OQ10: Integration between GRE and other areas of linguistics Integration with formal semantics and pragmatics has been limited DeVault & Stone 2004 on vagueness (based on Kyburg & Morreau 2000) Use of salience (mainly for category choice; see also Krahmer & Theune 2002) Formal semantics focusses on intensionality and quantification Generating appropriate REs in belief contexts: (John knows that the nuclear button / the leftmost button / the red button is dangerous) Guangzhou, Dec 2010

22 OQ10: Integration between GRE and other areas of linguistics It would be interesting to let GRE explore core areas of formal semantics, e.g. Use a flat KB as input (just like in GRE), to generate quantified NPs like Five rats died, A few rats died, Not all rats died. Find principles for choosing the quantifier pattern thats most appropriate in the utterance situation Early attempts by N.Creaney (2002), but limited progress so far. Guangzhou, Dec 2010

23 Q11: Problematic referents the water in this pond water 5, 2+3 virtue, power Guangzhou, Dec 2010

24 Plenty of challenges for enthusiastic young researchers! Guangzhou, Dec 2010


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