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Generationary or “How We Went beyond Word Sense Inventories and Learned to Gloss”

Michele Bevilacqua, Marco Maru, Roberto Navigli

202041 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Mainstream computational lexical semantics embraces the assumption that word senses can be represented as discrete items of a predefined inventory. In this paper we show this needs not be the case, and propose a unified model that is able to produce contextually appropriate definitions. In our model, Generationary, we employ a novel span-based encoding scheme which we use to fine-tune an English pre-trained Encoder-Decoder system to generate glosses. We show that, even though we drop the need of choosing from a predefined sense inventory, our model can be employed effectively: not only does Generationary outperform previous approaches in the generative task of Definition Modeling in many settings, but it also matches or surpasses the state of the art in discriminative tasks such as Word Sense Disambiguation and Word-in-Context. Finally, we show that Generationary benefits from training on data from multiple inventories, with strong gains on various zeroshot benchmarks, including a novel dataset of definitions for free adjective-noun phrases.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceNatural language processingArtificial intelligenceAdjectiveDiscriminative modelGenerative grammarNounWord (group theory)EncoderLinguisticsOperating systemPhilosophyNatural Language Processing TechniquesDigital Humanities and ScholarshipTopic Modeling
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