A typology of near-identity relations for coreference (NIDENT)

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Abstract

The task of coreference resolution requires people or systems to decide when two referring expressions refer to the 'same' entity or event. In real text, this is often a difficult decision because identity is never adequately defined, leading to contradictory treatment of cases in previous work. This paper introduces the concept of 'near-identity', a middle ground category between identity and non-identity, to handle such cases systematically. We present a typology of Near-Identity Relations (NIDENT) that includes fifteen types-grouped under four main families-that capture a wide range of ways in which (near-)coreference relations hold between discourse entities. We validate the theoretical model by annotating a small sample of real data and showing that inter-annotator agreement is high enough for stability (K = 0.58, and up to K = 0.65 and K = 0.84 when leaving out one and two outliers, respectively). This work enables subsequent creation of the first internally consistent language resource of this type through larger annotation efforts.

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APA

Recasens, M., Hovy, E., & Martí, M. A. (2010). A typology of near-identity relations for coreference (NIDENT). In Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation, LREC 2010 (pp. 149–156). European Language Resources Association (ELRA).

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