Automatic generation of a large dictionary with concreteness/abstractness ratings based on a small human dictionary

06/13/2022
by   Vladimir Ivanov, et al.
0

Concrete/abstract words are used in a growing number of psychological and neurophysiological research. For a few languages, large dictionaries have been created manually. This is a very time-consuming and costly process. To generate large high-quality dictionaries of concrete/abstract words automatically one needs extrapolating the expert assessments obtained on smaller samples. The research question that arises is how small such samples should be to do a good enough extrapolation. In this paper, we present a method for automatic ranking concreteness of words and propose an approach to significantly decrease amount of expert assessment. The method has been evaluated on a large test set for English. The quality of the constructed dictionaries is comparable to the expert ones. The correlation between predicted and expert ratings is higher comparing to the state-of-the-art methods.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
11/17/2018

Bilingual Dictionary Induction for Bantu Languages

We present a method for learning bilingual translation dictionaries betw...
research
08/12/2022

Automatically Creating a Large Number of New Bilingual Dictionaries

This paper proposes approaches to automatically create a large number of...
research
08/31/2016

A Dictionary-based Approach to Racism Detection in Dutch Social Media

We present a dictionary-based approach to racism detection in Dutch soci...
research
05/26/2021

Automatic Construction of Sememe Knowledge Bases via Dictionaries

A sememe is defined as the minimum semantic unit in linguistics. Sememe ...
research
12/14/2019

LScDC-new large scientific dictionary

In this paper, we present a scientific corpus of abstracts of academic p...
research
05/19/2017

A Lightweight Regression Method to Infer Psycholinguistic Properties for Brazilian Portuguese

Psycholinguistic properties of words have been used in various approache...
research
04/13/2018

Neologisms on Facebook

In this paper, we present a study of neologisms and loan words frequentl...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset