CLMay 8, 2019

On the Feasibility of Automated Detection of Allusive Text Reuse

arXiv:1905.02973v11090 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of detecting subtle text references for researchers in natural language processing, but it is incremental as it builds on existing retrieval methods.

The paper tackled the challenge of automated detection of allusive text reuse, which is difficult due to sparse lexical evidence, and found that using manual queries improves retrieval performance and distributional semantics provides a moderate boost.

The detection of allusive text reuse is particularly challenging due to the sparse evidence on which allusive references rely---commonly based on none or very few shared words. Arguably, lexical semantics can be resorted to since uncovering semantic relations between words has the potential to increase the support underlying the allusion and alleviate the lexical sparsity. A further obstacle is the lack of evaluation benchmark corpora, largely due to the highly interpretative character of the annotation process. In the present paper, we aim to elucidate the feasibility of automated allusion detection. We approach the matter from an Information Retrieval perspective in which referencing texts act as queries and referenced texts as relevant documents to be retrieved, and estimate the difficulty of benchmark corpus compilation by a novel inter-annotator agreement study on query segmentation. Furthermore, we investigate to what extent the integration of lexical semantic information derived from distributional models and ontologies can aid retrieving cases of allusive reuse. The results show that (i) despite low agreement scores, using manual queries considerably improves retrieval performance with respect to a windowing approach, and that (ii) retrieval performance can be moderately boosted with distributional semantics.

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