We have recently reported on two new
<term>
word-sense disambiguation systems
</term>
, one trained on bilingual material ( the
<term>
Canadian Hansards
</term>
) and the other trained on monolingual material (
<term>
Roget 's Thesaurus
</term>
and
<term>
Grolier 's Encyclopedia
</term>
) .
#24164We have recently reported on two new word-sense disambiguation systems, one trained on bilingual material (theCanadian Hansards) and the other trained on monolingual material (Roget's Thesaurus and Grolier's Encyclopedia).
model,10-6-H92-1045,ak
This result can be used as an additional source of
<term>
constraint
</term>
for improving the performance of the
<term>
word-sense disambiguation algorithm
</term>
.
#24271This result can be used as an additional source ofconstraint for improving the performance of the word-sense disambiguation algorithm.
other,17-1-H92-1045,ak
It is well-known that there are
<term>
polysemous words
</term>
like
<term>
sentence
</term>
whose
<term>
meaning
</term>
or
<term>
sense
</term>
depends on the
<term>
context of use
</term>
.
#24142It is well-known that there are polysemous words like sentence whose meaning or sense depends on thecontext of use.
tech,11-7-H92-1045,ak
In addition , it could also be used to help evaluate
<term>
disambiguation algorithms
</term>
that did not make use of the
<term>
discourse constraint
</term>
.
#24293In addition, it could also be used to help evaluatedisambiguation algorithms that did not make use of the discourse constraint.
other,18-4-H92-1045,ak
That is , if a
<term>
polysemous word
</term>
such as
<term>
sentence
</term>
appears two or more times in a well-written
<term>
discourse
</term>
, it is extremely likely that they will all share the same
<term>
sense
</term>
.
#24217That is, if a polysemous word such as sentence appears two or more times in a well-writtendiscourse, it is extremely likely that they will all share the same sense.
other,20-5-H92-1045,ak
This paper describes an experiment which confirmed this hypothesis and found that the tendency to share
<term>
sense
</term>
in the same
<term>
discourse
</term>
is extremely strong ( 98 % ) .
#24252This paper describes an experiment which confirmed this hypothesis and found that the tendency to share sense in the samediscourse is extremely strong (98%).
model,20-7-H92-1045,ak
In addition , it could also be used to help evaluate
<term>
disambiguation algorithms
</term>
that did not make use of the
<term>
discourse constraint
</term>
.
#24302In addition, it could also be used to help evaluate disambiguation algorithms that did not make use of thediscourse constraint.
other,12-3-H92-1045,ak
As this work was nearing completion , we observed a very strong
<term>
discourse effect
</term>
.
#24196As this work was nearing completion, we observed a very strongdiscourse effect.
lr-prod,33-2-H92-1045,ak
We have recently reported on two new
<term>
word-sense disambiguation systems
</term>
, one trained on bilingual material ( the
<term>
Canadian Hansards
</term>
) and the other trained on monolingual material (
<term>
Roget 's Thesaurus
</term>
and
<term>
Grolier 's Encyclopedia
</term>
) .
#24179We have recently reported on two new word-sense disambiguation systems, one trained on bilingual material (the Canadian Hansards) and the other trained on monolingual material (Roget's Thesaurus andGrolier 's Encyclopedia).
other,11-1-H92-1045,ak
It is well-known that there are
<term>
polysemous words
</term>
like
<term>
sentence
</term>
whose
<term>
meaning
</term>
or
<term>
sense
</term>
depends on the
<term>
context of use
</term>
.
#24136It is well-known that there are polysemous words like sentence whosemeaning or sense depends on the context of use.
other,5-4-H92-1045,ak
That is , if a
<term>
polysemous word
</term>
such as
<term>
sentence
</term>
appears two or more times in a well-written
<term>
discourse
</term>
, it is extremely likely that they will all share the same
<term>
sense
</term>
.
#24204That is, if apolysemous word such as sentence appears two or more times in a well-written discourse, it is extremely likely that they will all share the same sense.
other,6-1-H92-1045,ak
It is well-known that there are
<term>
polysemous words
</term>
like
<term>
sentence
</term>
whose
<term>
meaning
</term>
or
<term>
sense
</term>
depends on the
<term>
context of use
</term>
.
#24131It is well-known that there arepolysemous words like sentence whose meaning or sense depends on the context of use.
lr-prod,29-2-H92-1045,ak
We have recently reported on two new
<term>
word-sense disambiguation systems
</term>
, one trained on bilingual material ( the
<term>
Canadian Hansards
</term>
) and the other trained on monolingual material (
<term>
Roget 's Thesaurus
</term>
and
<term>
Grolier 's Encyclopedia
</term>
) .
#24175We have recently reported on two new word-sense disambiguation systems, one trained on bilingual material (the Canadian Hansards) and the other trained on monolingual material (Roget 's Thesaurus and Grolier's Encyclopedia).
other,13-1-H92-1045,ak
It is well-known that there are
<term>
polysemous words
</term>
like
<term>
sentence
</term>
whose
<term>
meaning
</term>
or
<term>
sense
</term>
depends on the
<term>
context of use
</term>
.
#24138It is well-known that there are polysemous words like sentence whose meaning orsense depends on the context of use.
other,31-4-H92-1045,ak
That is , if a
<term>
polysemous word
</term>
such as
<term>
sentence
</term>
appears two or more times in a well-written
<term>
discourse
</term>
, it is extremely likely that they will all share the same
<term>
sense
</term>
.
#24230That is, if a polysemous word such as sentence appears two or more times in a well-written discourse, it is extremely likely that they will all share the samesense.
other,16-5-H92-1045,ak
This paper describes an experiment which confirmed this hypothesis and found that the tendency to share
<term>
sense
</term>
in the same
<term>
discourse
</term>
is extremely strong ( 98 % ) .
#24248This paper describes an experiment which confirmed this hypothesis and found that the tendency to sharesense in the same discourse is extremely strong (98%).
other,9-1-H92-1045,ak
It is well-known that there are
<term>
polysemous words
</term>
like
<term>
sentence
</term>
whose
<term>
meaning
</term>
or
<term>
sense
</term>
depends on the
<term>
context of use
</term>
.
#24134It is well-known that there are polysemous words likesentence whose meaning or sense depends on the context of use.
other,9-4-H92-1045,ak
That is , if a
<term>
polysemous word
</term>
such as
<term>
sentence
</term>
appears two or more times in a well-written
<term>
discourse
</term>
, it is extremely likely that they will all share the same
<term>
sense
</term>
.
#24208That is, if a polysemous word such assentence appears two or more times in a well-written discourse, it is extremely likely that they will all share the same sense.
tech,7-2-H92-1045,ak
We have recently reported on two new
<term>
word-sense disambiguation systems
</term>
, one trained on bilingual material ( the
<term>
Canadian Hansards
</term>
) and the other trained on monolingual material (
<term>
Roget 's Thesaurus
</term>
and
<term>
Grolier 's Encyclopedia
</term>
) .
#24153We have recently reported on two newword-sense disambiguation systems, one trained on bilingual material (the Canadian Hansards) and the other trained on monolingual material (Roget's Thesaurus and Grolier's Encyclopedia).