Chulwoo Park
2024
When the Misidentified Adverbial Phrase Functions as a Complement
Yige Chen
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Kyuwon Kim
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KyungTae Lim
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Jungyeul Park
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Chulwoo Park
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: EMNLP 2024
This study investigates the predicate-argument structure in Korean language processing. Despite the importance of distinguishing mandatory arguments and optional modifiers in sentences, research in this area has been limited. We introduce a dataset with token-level annotations which labels mandatory and optional elements as complements and adjuncts, respectively. Particularly, we reclassify certain Korean phrases, previously misidentified as adverbial phrases, as complements, addressing misuses of the term adjunct in existing Korean treebanks. Utilizing a Korean dependency treebank, we develop an automatic labeling technique for complements and adjuncts. Experiments using the proposed dataset yield satisfying results, demonstrating that the dataset is trainable and reliable.
2023
K-UniMorph: Korean Universal Morphology and its Feature Schema
Eunkyul Jo
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Kim Kyuwon
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Xihan Wu
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KyungTae Lim
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Jungyeul Park
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Chulwoo Park
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: ACL 2023
We present in this work a new Universal Morphology dataset for Korean. Previously, the Korean language has been underrepresented in the field of morphological paradigms amongst hundreds of diverse world languages. Hence, we propose this Universal Morphological paradigms for the Korean language that preserve its distinct characteristics. For our K-UniMorph dataset, we outline each grammatical criterion in detail for the verbal endings, clarify how to extract inflected forms, and demonstrate how we generate the morphological schemata. This dataset adopts morphological feature schema from CITATION and CITATION for the Korean language as we extract inflected verb forms from the Sejong morphologically analyzed corpus that is one of the largest annotated corpora for Korean. During the data creation, our methodology also includes investigating the correctness of the conversion from the Sejong corpus. Furthermore, we carry out the inflection task using three different Korean word forms: letters, syllables and morphemes. Finally, we discuss and describe future perspectives on Korean morphological paradigms and the dataset.
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Co-authors
- KyungTae Lim 2
- Jungyeul Park 2
- Eunkyul Jo 1
- Kim Kyuwon 1
- Xihan Wu 1
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