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Hierarchical Relationships “is-a”: Distinguishing Belonging, Inclusion and Part/of Relationships.

Proceedings of the Fifth International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC 2006)

DOI:10.63317/4wm7narb8wua

Abstract

In thesauri, conceptual structures or semantic networks, relationships are too often vague. For instance, in terminology, the relationships between concepts are often reduced to the distinction established by standard (ISO 704, 1987) and (ISO 1087, 1990) between hierarchical relationships (genus-species relationships and part/whole relationships) and non-hierarchical relationships (“time, space, causal relationships, etc.”). The semantics of relationships are vague because the principal users of these relationships are industrial actors (translators of technical handbooks, terminologists, data-processing specialists, etc.). Nevertheless, the consistency of the models built must always be guaranteed... One possible approach to this problem consists in organizing the relationships in a typology based on logical properties. For instance, we typically use only the general relation “Is-a”. It is too vague. We assume that general relation “Is-a” is characterized by asymmetry. This asymmetry is specified in: (1) the belonging of one individualizable entity to a distributive class, (2) Inclusion among distributive classes and (3) relation part of (or “composition”).

Details

Paper ID
lrec2006-main-017
Pages
N/A
BibKey
jouis-2006-hierarchical
Editor
N/A
Publisher
European Language Resources Association (ELRA)
ISSN
2522-2686
ISBN
2-9517408-2-4
Conference
Fifth International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation
Location
Genoa, Italy
Date
24 May 2006 26 May 2006

Authors

  • CJ

    Christophe Jouis

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