Creating new wordnets / wordnets extensions #165
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I'm looking to create brand new wordnets and/or wordnet extensions, specifically along those two scenarios:
Both scenarios would likely produce very sparse space wordnet instances heavyly reliant on "main stream" wordnets for broader application/context. Simple, high-level set of capabilities I'm looking for include:
Can wn or wn-editor be used for that purpose? Should they? Any thoughts, ideas and suggestions (including of better forums/communities where to post this query :-) will be much welcomed! |
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For now, Wn can be used to facilitate the last two bullet points (partial import, comparing wordnets) with some scripting as they are not out-of-the-box features. Wn does not currently help with wordnet creation/modification, but the other project you mentioned, wn-editor aims to do just that. Regarding the sparse wordnets reliant on more complete ones, this is in fact a primary purpose of Wn. Most non-English wordnets were created using the "expand" methodology where non-English lemmas are placed on Princeton WordNet (PWN) synsets. While this causes the new wordnets to adapt to the conceptual structure of English (as defined by PWN), it helped the wordnets develop quickly. Wn can handle these "expand" wordnets with or without the base one (although it helps to have the base, which is invariably but not necessarily PWN 3.0, for synset relation traversal). Secondly, Wn accommodates "extension" lexicons which are meant to augment some base language to, for instance, add domain-specific jargon or relationships. Unfortunately there are not yet many examples of this (there's taboown, but it is not yet encoded as a WN-LMF 1.1 extension). |
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For now, Wn can be used to facilitate the last two bullet points (partial import, comparing wordnets) with some scripting as they are not out-of-the-box features. Wn does not currently help with wordnet creation/modification, but the other project you mentioned, wn-editor aims to do just that.
Regarding the sparse wordnets reliant on more complete ones, this is in fact a primary purpose of Wn. Most non-English wordnets were created using the "expand" methodology where non-English lemmas are placed on Princeton WordNet (PWN) synsets. While this causes the new wordnets to adapt to the conceptual structure of English (as defined by PWN), it helped the wordnets develop quickly. Wn can handle …