Eliciting explicit knowledge from domain experts in direct intrinsic evaluation of word embeddings for specialized domains
| Authors | |
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| Publication date | 2021 |
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| Book title | Human Evaluation of NLP Systems (HumEval) |
| Book subtitle | EACL 2021 : proceedings of the workshop : April 19, 2021, Online |
| ISBN (electronic) |
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| Event | workshop Human Evaluation of NLP Systems (HumEval) |
| Pages (from-to) | 107-113 |
| Number of pages | 7 |
| Publisher | Stroudsburg, PA: The Association for Computational Linguistics |
| Organisations |
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| Abstract |
We evaluate the use of direct intrinsic word embedding evaluation tasks for specialized language. Our case study is philosophical text: human expert judgements on the relatedness of philosophical terms are elicited using a synonym detection task and a coherence task. Uniquely for our task, experts must rely on explicit knowledge and cannot use their linguistic intuition, which may differ from that of the philosopher. We find that inter-rater agreement rates are similar to those of more conventional semantic annotation tasks, suggesting that these tasks can be used to evaluate word embeddings of text types for which implicit knowledge may not suffice.
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| Document type | Conference contribution |
| Note | With dataset |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://aclanthology.org/2021.humeval-1.12 |
| Downloads |
2021.humeval-1.12
(Final published version)
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| Supplementary materials | |
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