Abstract
This paper studies a new cognitively motivated semantic typing task, multi-axis event process typing, that, given an event process, attempts to infer free-form type labels describing (i) the type of action made by the process and (ii) the type of object the process seeks to affect. This task is inspired by computational and cognitive studies of event understanding, which suggest that understanding processes of events is often directed by recognizing the goals, plans or intentions of the protagonist(s). We develop a large dataset containing over 60k event processes, featuring ultra fine-grained typing on both the action and object type axes with very large (103 ∼ 104) label vocabularies. We then propose a hybrid learning framework, P2GT, which addresses the challenging typing problem with indirect supervision from glosses1 and a joint learning-to-rank framework. As our experiments indicate, P2GT supports identifying the intent of processes, as well as the fine semantic type of the affected object. It also demonstrates the capability of handling few-shot cases, and strong generalizability on out-of-domain processes.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Chen, M., Zhang, H., Wang, H., & Roth, D. (2020). “What Are You Trying to Do?” Semantic Typing of Event Processes. In CoNLL 2020 - 24th Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning, Proceedings of the Conference (pp. 531–542). Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL). https://doi.org/10.18653/v1/2020.conll-1.43
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