Foreword; Preface; Acknowledgments; Part I. Fundamentals: 1. What is a semantic annotation?; 2. Data segmentation; 3. Modeling a semantic annotation scheme; 4. Representation and serialization; 5. What does semantics do for annotation?; 6. Annotation-based semantics; Part II. Time and Events: 7. Temporal ontology; 8. Normalizing TimeML with some modifications; 9. Extending the range of temporal annotation; 10. Proper interpretation of temporal relators; Part III. Motion Space, and Time: 11. ISO-Space evolving from SpatialML; 12. Dynamic paths, projection, and orientation; 13. Toward a dynamic annotation scheme.
This book develops natural language semantics for spatio-temporal information based on annotation structures rather than syntax.
Kiyong Lee is Professor Emeritus of Linguistics at Korea University in Seoul. He was President of the Linguistic Society of Korea and the Korean Society for Cognitive Science, and has worked on creating standards for semantic annotation as an ISO working group Convenor and Project Leader. In 1974, he published his University of Texas at Austin dissertation, On Montague Grammar. His published works include Computational Morphology and a three-volume book, Language and the World: Formal Semantics; Tense and Modality: Possible-Worlds Semantics; and Situation and Information: Situation Semantics.
'Annotation-based Semantics for Space and Time in Language provides
an exhaustive consideration of the syntactic and semantic concerns
involved in devising a linguistic annotation scheme. Although
focused on spatial and temporal phenomena and presented primarily
from the perspective of ISO standardization efforts, Professor
Lee's in-depth exposition of the relevant issues will benefit
anyone engaged in a linguistic annotation project.' Nancy Ide,
Vassar College
'This book draws on the author's decades of experience working on
the standardization of semantic annotation as the convenor of an
International Organization for Standardization (ISO) working group
to develop a formal model-theoretical semantic interpretation to
annotation structures in the domain of space and time. What sets
this book apart from most existing work on semantic annotation is
its commitment to provide interpretable semantics. This imposes a
level of rigor on semantic annotation that makes it more likely to
withstand the test of time. This book is a must-read for
researchers interested in the semantics of temporal and spatial
structures in language, and in semantic annotation in general.'
Nianwen Xue, Brandeis University
'This book investigates spatial and temporal semantic annotations
in a principled way. From a natural language processing and
downstream applications perspective, the presented knowledge paves
the way to integrate the annotation-based semantics in
computational models. Most importantly, it provides the means to
integrate the symbolic abstractions with the sub-symbolic ones
learnt by the recent transformer-based deep learning architectures.
This book is a comprehensive source of information that formally
highlights the basic building blocks of spatial, temporal, and
compositional reasoning over natural language.' Parisa
Kordjamshidi, Michigan State University
'Kiyong Lee's monograph is a welcome addition to the field of
natural language processing; it nicely sums up his several decades
of research written in and focusing on English. In this novel text,
Lee proposes an annotation-based semantics as part of the
construction of spatio-temporal annotation schemes. The beauty of
this work is that the proposal is directly applicable to natural
language processing and machine learning with little to no
modification. This book is a must-read for researchers or students
who are interested in spatial and temporal expressions and their
treatments within the context of computational linguistics.'
Chongwon Park, University of Minnesota Duluth
'This important book a provides a formal underpinning of the
groundbreaking work on the semantic annotation of natural language
expressions of time, space and events in the last 15 years, which
has resulted in international annotation standards. The author
adopts an approach that has been developed in this context, which
distinguishes the abstract syntax of annotations from their
concrete encoding, typically using XML, and assigns a compositional
semantic interpretation to the annotation structures of the
abstract syntax. Using a type-theoretic representation language as
an interface between annotation structures and logical forms, a
detailed account is given of the interpretation of annotations of
spatial and temporal information in model-theoretic terms. Anyone
who takes an interest in the computation of meaning should read
this book.' Harry Bunt, Tilburg University
'This is a significant contribution to both formal semantics and
computational linguistics, providing a situated and small
world-based approach. Its event-driven representation of time and
space lays the foundation for elegant formal semantics to
facilitate language processing. It offers a valuable end-to-end
discussion of the role of semantics annotation – from the minimal
linguistic units to the automatic processing of texts. Readers will
find it succinct, timely, and expansive in the topics covered.'
Chu-Ren Huang, Hong Kong Polytechnic University
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