CLAIIRLGMay 17, 2019

Don't Blame Distributional Semantics if it can't do Entailment

arXiv:1905.07356v11093 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work clarifies the theoretical role of distributional semantics for researchers in computational linguistics and cognitive science, though it is incremental in reinterpreting existing concepts.

The paper argues that distributional semantics is an adequate model of expression meaning by redefining entailment and reference as aspects of speaker meaning rather than expression meaning, addressing a theoretical misconception in linguistics and cognitive science.

Distributional semantics has had enormous empirical success in Computational Linguistics and Cognitive Science in modeling various semantic phenomena, such as semantic similarity, and distributional models are widely used in state-of-the-art Natural Language Processing systems. However, the theoretical status of distributional semantics within a broader theory of language and cognition is still unclear: What does distributional semantics model? Can it be, on its own, a fully adequate model of the meanings of linguistic expressions? The standard answer is that distributional semantics is not fully adequate in this regard, because it falls short on some of the central aspects of formal semantic approaches: truth conditions, entailment, reference, and certain aspects of compositionality. We argue that this standard answer rests on a misconception: These aspects do not belong in a theory of expression meaning, they are instead aspects of speaker meaning, i.e., communicative intentions in a particular context. In a slogan: words do not refer, speakers do. Clearing this up enables us to argue that distributional semantics on its own is an adequate model of expression meaning. Our proposal sheds light on the role of distributional semantics in a broader theory of language and cognition, its relationship to formal semantics, and its place in computational models.

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