Towards a corpus based heuristic for assessing communal common ground

Roman Kutlak, Kees van Deemter, Christopher Stuart Mellish

Research output: Contribution to conferenceUnpublished paperpeer-review

Abstract

In this article we present a corpus-based heuristic for determining what facts are likely to be known by most or all the members of a given community. We believe that a heuristic of this kind could be useful in a large range of applications, computational and otherwise. For example, the heuristic could help a Natural Language Generation system to avoid stating facts that are widely known, thus diminishing the chance that the reader will get bored or irritated. Another example is a system that uses formal argumentation theory to present arguments to people; such a system could be improved by linking arguments to facts that are widely known. For example, to argue that butter is unhealthy, it might suffice to say “butter increases cholesterol”, because it is widely known (or believed) that cholesterol can cause heart disease. Our goal is to use the proposed heuristic in determining what facts to mention in a description of a famous person.
Original languageEnglish
Pages1-4
Number of pages4
Publication statusPublished - 25 Apr 2012
EventSymposium: Influencing People with Information - Aberdeen, United Kingdom
Duration: 25 Apr 201225 Apr 2012

Conference

ConferenceSymposium: Influencing People with Information
Country/TerritoryUnited Kingdom
CityAberdeen
Period25/04/1225/04/12

Keywords

  • common ground
  • heuristic
  • web as corpus
  • evaluation

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