Titel: A Context Sensitive Variant Dictionary for Supporting Variant Selection
Personen:Nishikawa, Aya/Nishimura, Ryo/Watanabe, Yasuhiko/Okada, Yoshihiro
Jahr: 2010
Typ: Aufsatz
Verlag: European Language Resources Association (ELRA)
Ortsangabe: Valletta, Malta
In: Barbu Mititelu, Verginica/Pekar, Viktor/Barbu, Eduard (Hgg.): Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC 2010), Valetta, 17 - 23 May 2010
Seiten: 2306-2309
Untersuchte Sprachen: Japanisch*Japanese
Schlagwörter: Adaptivität*adaptivity
Benutzungsforschung*usage research
Benutzungssituation*usage situation/look-up situation
Fachlexikografie*specialised lexicography/LSP lexicography
URI: http://www.lrec-conf.org/proceedings/lrec2010/pdf/699_Paper.pdf
Zuletzt besucht: 10.09.2018
Abstract: In Japanese, there are a large number of notational variants of words. This is because Japanese words are written in three kinds of characters: kanji (Chinese) characters, hiragara letters, and katakana letters. Japanese students study basic rules of Japanese writing in school for many years. However, it is difficult to learn which variant is suitable for a certain context in official, business, and technical documents because the rules have many exceptions. From the viewpoint of information retrieval, a considerable number of studies have been made on notational variants, however, previous Japanese writing support systems were not concerned with them sufficiently. This is because their main purposes were misspelling detection. Students often use variants which are not misspelling but unsuitable for the contexts in official, business, and technical documents. To solve this problem, we developed a context sensitive variant dictionary. A writing support system based on the context sensitive variant dictionary detects unsuitable variants for the contexts in students' reports and shows suitable ones to the students. This dictionary is based on the idea that context suitable variants are used dominantly in the contexts of official, business, and technical documents. In this study, we first show how to develop a context sensitive variant dictionary by which our system determines which variant is suitable for a context in official, business, and technical documents. Finally, we conducted a control experiment and show the effectiveness of our dictionary.