Stefanie Eckmann

2papers

2 Papers

CLApr 18, 2018
Diachronic Usage Relatedness (DURel): A Framework for the Annotation of Lexical Semantic Change

Dominik Schlechtweg, Sabine Schulte im Walde, Stefanie Eckmann

We propose a framework that extends synchronic polysemy annotation to diachronic changes in lexical meaning, to counteract the lack of resources for evaluating computational models of lexical semantic change. Our framework exploits an intuitive notion of semantic relatedness, and distinguishes between innovative and reductive meaning changes with high inter-annotator agreement. The resulting test set for German comprises ratings from five annotators for the relatedness of 1,320 use pairs across 22 target words.

CLJun 15, 2017
German in Flux: Detecting Metaphoric Change via Word Entropy

Dominik Schlechtweg, Stefanie Eckmann, Enrico Santus et al.

This paper explores the information-theoretic measure entropy to detect metaphoric change, transferring ideas from hypernym detection to research on language change. We also build the first diachronic test set for German as a standard for metaphoric change annotation. Our model shows high performance, is unsupervised, language-independent and generalizable to other processes of semantic change.