https://scholars.lib.ntu.edu.tw/handle/123456789/577592
標題: | Do you believe it happened? Assessing Chinese readers' veridicality judgments | 作者: | Chang Y.-Y SHU-KAI HSIEH |
關鍵字: | Linguistics; High confidence; Linguistic features; Temporal information; Explosives | 公開日期: | 2020 | 起(迄)頁: | 259-267 | 來源出版物: | LREC 2020 - 12th International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation, Conference Proceedings | 摘要: | This work collects and studies Chinese readers' veridicality judgments to news events (whether an event is viewed as happening or not). For instance, in “The FBI alleged in court documents that Zazi had admitted having a handwritten recipe for explosives on his computer”, do people believe that Zazi had a handwritten recipe for explosives? The goal is to observe the pragmatic behaviors of linguistic features under context which affects readers in making veridicality judgments. Exploring from the datasets, it is found that features such as event-selecting predicates (ESP), modality markers, adverbs, temporal information, and statistics have an impact on readers' veridicality judgments. We further investigated that modality markers with high certainty do not necessarily trigger readers to have high confidence in believing an event happened. Additionally, the source of information introduced by an ESP presents low effects to veridicality judgments, even when an event is attributed to an authority (e.g. “The FBI”). A corpus annotated with Chinese readers' veridicality judgments is released as the Chinese PragBank for further analysis. ? European Language Resources Association (ELRA), licensed under CC-BY-NC |
URI: | https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85096513375&partnerID=40&md5=cf4094285c3a22e2d2e8a1bf39ad4122 https://scholars.lib.ntu.edu.tw/handle/123456789/577592 |
顯示於: | 語言學研究所 |
在 IR 系統中的文件,除了特別指名其著作權條款之外,均受到著作權保護,並且保留所有的權利。