VENSES - A linguistically-based system for semantic evaluation

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Abstract

The system for semantic evaluation VENSES (Venice Semantic Evaluation System) is organized as a pipeline of two subsystems: the first is a reduced version of GETARUN, our system for Text Understanding. The output of the system is a flat list of augmented headdependent structures with Grammatical Relations and Semantic Roles labels. The evaluation system is made up of two main modules: the first is a sequence of linguistic rules; the second is a quantitatively based measurement of input structures and predicates. VENSES measures semantic similarity which may range from identical linguistic items, to synonymous, lexically similar, or just morphologically derivable. Both modules go through General Consistency checks which are targeted to high level semantic attributes like presence of modality, negation, and opacity operators, temporal and spatial location checks. Results in cws, recall and precision are homogeneous for both training and test corpus and fare higher than 60%. © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2006.

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APA

Delmonte, R., Tonelli, S., Boniforti, M. A. P., & Bristot, A. (2006). VENSES - A linguistically-based system for semantic evaluation. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 3944 LNAI, pp. 344–371). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/11736790_20

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