@inproceedings{hayes-etal-2004-enriching,
title = "Enriching {W}ord{N}et Via Generative Metonymy and Creative Polysemy",
author = "Hayes, Jer and
Veale, Tony and
Seco, Nuno",
editor = "Lino, Maria Teresa and
Xavier, Maria Francisca and
Ferreira, F{\'a}tima and
Costa, Rute and
Silva, Raquel",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation ({LREC}{'}04)",
month = may,
year = "2004",
address = "Lisbon, Portugal",
publisher = "European Language Resources Association (ELRA)",
url = "http://www.lrec-conf.org/proceedings/lrec2004/pdf/419.pdf",
abstract = "Metonymy is a creative process that establishes relationships based on contiguity or semantic relatedness between concepts. We outline a mechanism for deriving new concepts from WordNet using metonymy. We argue that by exploiting polysemy in WordNet we can take advantage of the metonymic relations between concepts. The focus of our metonymy generation work has been the creation of noun{\-} noun compounds that do not already exist in WordNet and which can be profitably added to WordNet. The mechanism of metonymy generation we outline takes a source compound and creates new compounds by exploiting the polysemy associated with hyponyms of the head of the source compound. We argue that metonymy generation is a sound basis for concept creation as the newly created compounds are semantically related to the source concept. We demonstrate that metonymy generation based on polysemy is superior to a method of metonymy generation that ignores polysemy. These new concepts can be used to augment WordNet.",
}
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<abstract>Metonymy is a creative process that establishes relationships based on contiguity or semantic relatedness between concepts. We outline a mechanism for deriving new concepts from WordNet using metonymy. We argue that by exploiting polysemy in WordNet we can take advantage of the metonymic relations between concepts. The focus of our metonymy generation work has been the creation of noun\- noun compounds that do not already exist in WordNet and which can be profitably added to WordNet. The mechanism of metonymy generation we outline takes a source compound and creates new compounds by exploiting the polysemy associated with hyponyms of the head of the source compound. We argue that metonymy generation is a sound basis for concept creation as the newly created compounds are semantically related to the source concept. We demonstrate that metonymy generation based on polysemy is superior to a method of metonymy generation that ignores polysemy. These new concepts can be used to augment WordNet.</abstract>
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%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Enriching WordNet Via Generative Metonymy and Creative Polysemy
%A Hayes, Jer
%A Veale, Tony
%A Seco, Nuno
%Y Lino, Maria Teresa
%Y Xavier, Maria Francisca
%Y Ferreira, Fátima
%Y Costa, Rute
%Y Silva, Raquel
%S Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC’04)
%D 2004
%8 May
%I European Language Resources Association (ELRA)
%C Lisbon, Portugal
%F hayes-etal-2004-enriching
%X Metonymy is a creative process that establishes relationships based on contiguity or semantic relatedness between concepts. We outline a mechanism for deriving new concepts from WordNet using metonymy. We argue that by exploiting polysemy in WordNet we can take advantage of the metonymic relations between concepts. The focus of our metonymy generation work has been the creation of noun\- noun compounds that do not already exist in WordNet and which can be profitably added to WordNet. The mechanism of metonymy generation we outline takes a source compound and creates new compounds by exploiting the polysemy associated with hyponyms of the head of the source compound. We argue that metonymy generation is a sound basis for concept creation as the newly created compounds are semantically related to the source concept. We demonstrate that metonymy generation based on polysemy is superior to a method of metonymy generation that ignores polysemy. These new concepts can be used to augment WordNet.
%U http://www.lrec-conf.org/proceedings/lrec2004/pdf/419.pdf
Markdown (Informal)
[Enriching WordNet Via Generative Metonymy and Creative Polysemy](http://www.lrec-conf.org/proceedings/lrec2004/pdf/419.pdf) (Hayes et al., LREC 2004)
ACL