BRUNO

From UNL Wiki
(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
(Methodology)
(Methodology)
Line 46: Line 46:
 
#:*The list of entries can be extracted from prestigious monolingual dictionaries or from a corpus considered to be representative of the standard written language<ref>This corpus can be either an existing reputable corpus or a new corpus compiled according to the criteria defined at [[NC]].</ref>.
 
#:*The list of entries can be extracted from prestigious monolingual dictionaries or from a corpus considered to be representative of the standard written language<ref>This corpus can be either an existing reputable corpus or a new corpus compiled according to the criteria defined at [[NC]].</ref>.
 
#:*The list of entries must be ordered according to the frequency of occurrence (the most frequent entries must come first)<ref>The frequency of use is not often informed by ordinary dictionaries but may be inferred from the several distributions of the same dictionary: basic, intermediate or advanced, for instance.</ref>.
 
#:*The list of entries must be ordered according to the frequency of occurrence (the most frequent entries must come first)<ref>The frequency of use is not often informed by ordinary dictionaries but may be inferred from the several distributions of the same dictionary: basic, intermediate or advanced, for instance.</ref>.
#:*The list of entries must be lemmatized<ref>There should be as many lemmas as different '''morphological behavior''' (part-of-speech, gender, number, inflections, etc.). The word "book", in English, should correspond to two lemmas: "book" as a noun, and "book" as a verb. Note that the many different meanings of "book" as a noun do not lead to different lemmas, because all them have the same morphological behavior, i.e., are singular and make plural in -s. On the other hand, the noun "livre", in French, should correspond to two lemmas: "livre" as a noun masculine (= "book"), and "livre" as a noun feminine (= "pound"). This difference is not derived from the different meanings, but from the different morphological behavior: one is masculine and the other is feminine.</ref>
+
#:*The list of entries must be lemmatized<ref>There should be as many lemmas as different '''morphological behavior''' (part-of-speech, gender, number, inflections, etc.). The word "book", in English, should correspond to two lemmas: "book" as a noun, and "book" as a verb. Note that the many different meanings of "book" as a noun do not lead to different lemmas, because all of them have the same morphological behavior, i.e., are singular and make plural in -s. On the other hand, the noun "livre", in French, should correspond to two lemmas: "livre" as a noun masculine (= "book"), and "livre" as a noun feminine (= "pound"). This difference is not derived from the different meanings, but from the different morphological behavior: one is masculine and the other is feminine.</ref>
 
#:*Entries must be provided in a plain text file (.txt) with UTF-8 encoding, with one entry per line, along with the corresponding value of the lexical category [[LEX]], in the following format:
 
#:*Entries must be provided in a plain text file (.txt) with UTF-8 encoding, with one entry per line, along with the corresponding value of the lexical category [[LEX]], in the following format:
 
#::lemma:LEX<ref>See an example at [http://www.unlweb.net/resources/bruno/hu_a1.txt]</ref>
 
#::lemma:LEX<ref>See an example at [http://www.unlweb.net/resources/bruno/hu_a1.txt]</ref>

Revision as of 16:38, 24 September 2013

The project BRUNO (Basic Resources for UNLizatiOn) is devoted to the creation of NL-UNL (analysis) dictionaries.

Contents

Goal

The project BRUNO has two main goals:

  1. To provide several word-to-concept monolingual databases (i.e., encoding or reader's dictionaries). These dictionaries are expected to be used in UNLization, i.e., in generating UNL graphs out of natural language documents, especially through IAN.
  2. To find concepts that are not enclosed in the WordNet3.0 and should be incorporated to the UNL Dictionary.

Repository

BRUNO is language dependent. Every language has its own set of entries to be addressed. The repository is divided into 6 different subprojects according to the frequency of use of the lemmas.

Repository # of lemmas[1]
BRUNO-A1 2,000
BRUNO-A2 3,000
BRUNO-B1 5,000
BRUNO-B2 5,000
BRUNO-C1 5,000
BRUNO-C2 5,000

Requisites

The project BRUNO is open to all languages complying with the following requisites:

Methodology

  1. List of entries
    Participants are expected to provide a list of the entries according to the following criteria:
    • The list of entries can be extracted from prestigious monolingual dictionaries or from a corpus considered to be representative of the standard written language[2].
    • The list of entries must be ordered according to the frequency of occurrence (the most frequent entries must come first)[3].
    • The list of entries must be lemmatized[4]
    • Entries must be provided in a plain text file (.txt) with UTF-8 encoding, with one entry per line, along with the corresponding value of the lexical category LEX, in the following format:
    lemma:LEX[5]
  2. Verification
    The list of entries is verified by a language manager or, in case there is no language manager for the target language, by the Language Resources Manager of the UNDL Foundation. If approved, it is uploaded to the UNLarium, and the corresponding BRUNO project is open.
  3. Dictionary
    Entries become available, in the UNLarium, for all the registered users of a given language, in case of open projects, or for the approved candidates, in case of closed projects. Users are expected to provide all the morphological, syntactic and semantic information for each entry

Notes

  1. The lemmas must be ordered according to the frequency of use. In that sense, BRUNO-A1 deals with the most frequent lemmas from 1 to 2,000. BRUNO-A2 deals with the most frequent lemmas from 2,001 to 5,000. BRUNO-B1 deals with the most frequent lemmas from 5,001 to 10,000. And so on.
  2. This corpus can be either an existing reputable corpus or a new corpus compiled according to the criteria defined at NC.
  3. The frequency of use is not often informed by ordinary dictionaries but may be inferred from the several distributions of the same dictionary: basic, intermediate or advanced, for instance.
  4. There should be as many lemmas as different morphological behavior (part-of-speech, gender, number, inflections, etc.). The word "book", in English, should correspond to two lemmas: "book" as a noun, and "book" as a verb. Note that the many different meanings of "book" as a noun do not lead to different lemmas, because all of them have the same morphological behavior, i.e., are singular and make plural in -s. On the other hand, the noun "livre", in French, should correspond to two lemmas: "livre" as a noun masculine (= "book"), and "livre" as a noun feminine (= "pound"). This difference is not derived from the different meanings, but from the different morphological behavior: one is masculine and the other is feminine.
  5. See an example at [1]
Software