Literature DB >> 19587179

The components of paraphrase evaluations.

Philip M McCarthy1, Rebekah H Guess, Danielle S McNamara.   

Abstract

Two sentences are paraphrases if their meanings are equivalent but their words and syntax are different. Paraphrasing can be used to aid comprehension, stimulate prior knowledge, and assist in writing-skills development. As such, paraphrasing is a feature of fields as diverse as discourse psychology, composition, and computer science. Although automated paraphrase assessment is both commonplace and useful, research has centered solely on artificial, edited paraphrases and has used only binary dimensions (i.e., is or is not a paraphrase). In this study, we use an extensive database (N=1,998) of natural paraphrases generated by high school students that have been assessed along 10 dimensions (e.g., semantic completeness, lexical similarity, syntactical similarity). This study investigates the components of paraphrase quality emerging from these dimensions and examines whether computational approaches can simulate those human evaluations. The results suggest that semantic and syntactic evaluations are the primary components of paraphrase quality, and that computationally light systems such as latent semantic analysis (semantics) and minimal edit distances (syntax) present promising approaches to simulating human evaluations of paraphrases.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19587179     DOI: 10.3758/BRM.41.3.682

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Res Methods        ISSN: 1554-351X


  2 in total

Review 1.  The Next Frontier in Communication and the ECLIPPSE Study: Bridging the Linguistic Divide in Secure Messaging.

Authors:  Dean Schillinger; Danielle McNamara; Scott Crossley; Courtney Lyles; Howard H Moffet; Urmimala Sarkar; Nicholas Duran; Jill Allen; Jennifer Liu; Danielle Oryn; Neda Ratanawongsa; Andrew J Karter
Journal:  J Diabetes Res       Date:  2017-02-07       Impact factor: 4.011

2.  A cognitive inquiry into similarities and differences between translation and paraphrase: Evidence from eye movement data.

Authors:  Xingcheng Ma; Tianyi Han; Dechao Li
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-08-05       Impact factor: 3.752

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.