Hierarchical Event Grounding

02/08/2023
by   Jiefu Ou, et al.
0

Event grounding aims at linking mention references in text corpora to events from a knowledge base (KB). Previous work on this task focused primarily on linking to a single KB event, thereby overlooking the hierarchical aspects of events. Events in documents are typically described at various levels of spatio-temporal granularity (Glavas et al. 2014). These hierarchical relations are utilized in downstream tasks of narrative understanding and schema construction. In this work, we present an extension to the event grounding task that requires tackling hierarchical event structures from the KB. Our proposed task involves linking a mention reference to a set of event labels from a subevent hierarchy in the KB. We propose a retrieval methodology that leverages event hierarchy through an auxiliary hierarchical loss (Murty et al. 2018). On an automatically created multilingual dataset from Wikipedia and Wikidata, our experiments demonstrate the effectiveness of the hierarchical loss against retrieve and re-rank baselines (Wu et al. 2020; Pratapa, Gupta, and Mitamura 2022). Furthermore, we demonstrate the systems' ability to aid hierarchical discovery among unseen events.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
04/13/2022

Multilingual Event Linking to Wikidata

We present a task of multilingual linking of events to a knowledge base....
research
12/15/2021

Event Linking: Grounding Event Mentions to Wikipedia

Comprehending an article requires understanding its constituent events. ...
research
10/16/2017

Aligning Script Events with Narrative Texts

Script knowledge plays a central role in text understanding and is relev...
research
05/24/2023

COMET-M: Reasoning about Multiple Events in Complex Sentences

Understanding the speaker's intended meaning often involves drawing comm...
research
09/28/2022

Cross-Domain Neural Entity Linking

Entity Linking is the task of matching a mention to an entity in a given...
research
06/15/2021

The Possible, the Plausible, and the Desirable: Event-Based Modality Detection for Language Processing

Modality is the linguistic ability to describe events with added informa...
research
12/31/2021

Transformer Embeddings of Irregularly Spaced Events and Their Participants

The neural Hawkes process (Mei Eisner, 2017) is a generative model o...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset