Using Grounded Word Representations to Study Theories of Lexical Concepts

Dylan Ebert, Ellie Pavlick
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The fields of cognitive science and philosophy have proposed many different theories for how humans represent “concepts”. Multiple such theories are compatible with state-of-the-art NLP methods, and could in principle be operationalized using neural networks. We focus on two particularly prominent theories–Classical Theory and Prototype Theory–in the context of visually-grounded lexical representations. We compare when and how the behavior of models based on these theories differs in terms of categorization and entailment tasks. Our preliminary results suggest that Classical-based representations perform better for entailment and Prototype-based representations perform better for categorization. We discuss plans for additional experiments needed to confirm these initial observations.
运用基础词表征研究词汇概念理论
认知科学和哲学领域已经提出了许多关于人类如何表示“概念”的不同理论。多个这样的理论与最先进的NLP方法兼容,原则上可以使用神经网络进行操作。在视觉基础词汇表征的背景下,我们关注两个特别突出的理论——经典理论和原型理论。我们比较了基于这些理论的模型的行为何时以及如何在分类和蕴涵任务方面有所不同。我们的初步结果表明,基于经典的表征在蕴涵方面表现更好,而基于原型的表征在分类方面表现更好。我们讨论了确认这些初步观察结果所需的其他实验计划。
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