SEEK AND FIND A retrieval approach to construction search
Abstract
Finding occurrences of specific grammatical constructions in running text is a central issue to constructionist approaches to linguistics and language processing. Of special concern are partially schematic constructions that cannot be distinguished from unrelated constructions by surface
form alone. In order to detect instances of such complex constructions we consider using features that are intended to capture semantic restrictions of particular construction elements. We address
this task as an information retrieval (IR) problem, and describe a simple interactive architecture for searching for constructions.
The retrieval system is guided by the user who provides it with a number of positive seed examples (occurrences of the construction) and tailors a ranking function based on a combination of lexical semantic
similarity features (lexicon-based or distributional). The system was evaluated using standard IR metrics on a new benchmark for construction retrieval
in Swedish, and we observed that a lexical-semantic re-ranker can give significant improvement over a lemma-based baseline, but must be tailored for the construction at hand. The search system is effective even with a small number of positive seed examples, which proves the feasibility of our approach from a user perspective.
Degree
Student essay
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2016-09-15Author
Ehrlemark, Anna
Keywords
Construction Grammar
Information Retrieval
Construction detection
Corpus Linguistics
Lexical Semantics
Constructicography
Publication type
H2
Language
eng