Event-time relation in natural language text

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Abstract

Due to the numerous information needs, retrieval of events from a given natural language text is inevitable. In natural language processing(NLP), "Events" are situations, occurrences, real-world entities or facts. Extraction of events and arranging them on a timeline is helpful in various NLP applications like building the summary of news articles, processing health records, and Question Answering System (QA) systems. This paper presents a framework for identifying the events and times from a given document and representing them using a graph data structure. As a result, a graph is derived to show event-time relationships in the given text. Events form the nodes in a graph, and edges represent the temporal relations among the nodes. Time of an event occurrence exists in two forms namely qualitative (like before, after, during, etc.) and quantitative (exact time points/periods). To build the event-time-event structure quantitative time is normalized to qualitative form. Thus obtained temporal information is used to label the edges among the events. Data set released in the shared task EvTExtract of (Forum for Information Retrieval Extraction) FIRE 2018 conference is identified to evaluate the framework. Precision and recall are used as evaluation metrics to access the performance of the work with other methods mentioned in state of the art with 85% of accuracy and 90% of precision.

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Guda, V., & Suresh Kumar, S. (2019). Event-time relation in natural language text. International Journal of Engineering and Advanced Technology, 8(6), 716–724. https://doi.org/10.35940/ijeat.F7976.088619

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