A pleasure to me to be cc’ed by Prof. Delmonte. In fact tensors should capture ideally both paradigmatic and synthagmatic properties of a word in a sentence given the fact that they are usually made up of matrices, that is at least couples of vectors where the rows are represented by embeddings. The question is do matrices represent all needed semantic and syntactic properties of a sentence? I doubt it and in fact when it comes to deep implicit content they certainly fail. But also with OOVWs or simply rare words no reasonable outcome is obtained. Rodolfo Dear lbrtchx
Yes, indeed, it is possible for a string (or an _expression_ or a lexical item... etc.) to refer to different things based on different contexts. One could refer to it as polysemy (or not). Many fields have shared vocabulary items. Same character or character strings can be used in ways that show differences "in nature"/"by definition" (i.e. different due to discipline-specific, historical reasons) or differences in practice (which could be more general/generalized). Esp. in an engineering field nowadays, a term used for/in practice is likely to gradually take over the one favored historically over time.
Then again, Is your inquiry more about vocabulary use, or for what reason are you asking your question(s)?
Best Ada
On Tue, Jul 25, 2023 at 10:40 AM Peratham Wiriyathammabhum via Corpora < [email protected]> wrote: Not talking to any medical doctors for another sense :) From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]:
tensor
n 1: a generalization of the concept of a vector
2: any of several muscles that cause an attached structure to become tense or firm On 7/24/23, Andrea Nini via Corpora <[email protected]> wrote:... See:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tensor_(machine_learning)
Oh! Am I silly! ;-) That is why I was noticing a really stridentimpedance between what they were saying and what we, Mathematicians,mean by, have been taught to understand as: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tensor I was fancying self-describing decentralized hyper-forests of textsegments out of which a Language's grammar could be derived ... andbased on such totally off the mark, fanciful ideations I was trying tosomehow figure out how to describe the inner intersubjective aspectsof valuation through tensor planes ... there I went.~On 7/24/23, Darren Cook <[email protected]> wrote: Perhaps my doubts relate to the fact that as a theoretical physicist
myself, the kind of "mathematical purity" I was trained into...
By the way, this is probably veering off-topic for corpora-l.
datascience.stackexchange.com is quite a good place for questions about
transformers, embeddings, NLP, etc.
As a TI I can't use stackoverflow, stackexchange ... (they start roadblocking you in really obnoxious ways) I can't even visit publiclibraries in "'the' 'land' of 'the' free ...", "because" theyblacklisted me in the FBI criminal index (believe me, you would laughabout it if you could if you knew me) lbrtchx_______________________________________________Corpora mailing list -- [email protected]https://list.elra.info/mailman3/postorius/lists/corpora.list.elra.info/To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]
_______________________________________________
Corpora mailing list -- [email protected]
https://list.elra.info/mailman3/postorius/lists/corpora.list.elra.info/
To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]
_______________________________________________
Corpora mailing list -- [email protected]
https://list.elra.info/mailman3/postorius/lists/corpora.list.elra.info/
To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]
Nota automatica aggiunta dal sistema di posta
Sostieni il futuro
Dona il tuo 5x1000 al Collegio Internazionale Ca' Foscari FINANZIAMENTO DELLA RICERCA SCIENTIFICA E DELLA UNIVERSITÀ | CODICE FISCALE: 80007720271
|