This invention pertains to determining the semantic content of a network, and more particularly to improving searching of the network.
The Internet is about content. Content being accessed, published, indexed, analyzed, secured, purchased, stolen, vandalized, etc. Whether the content is white-papers, on-line books, catalogs, real-time games, address books, streaming audio and video, etc., it is content that people and cyber-agents are seeking. The future of the Internet lies not in bandwidth or capacity, but rather the ability to retrieve relevant content. Technology that allows fast and accurate access to relevant content will be used by the masses of carbon and silicon Internet users. Not because it is a better mouse-trap, but because controlled access to relevant content will allow the Internet to thrive, survive, and continue its explosive growth. Fast and accurate semantic access to Internet content will determine who rules the next Internet era.
Caught between the sheer (and ever growing) volume of content, the huge and rapidly increasing number of Internet users, and a growing sophistication in the demands of those users, the current TCP/IP infrastructure and architecture is showing its inadequacies—it is a victim of its own success. One of the many strategies under consideration by the Internet community for redressing these inadequacies is to build intelligence into the network. Directory Services and Caching are two prime examples of intelligent network components. Adaptive routing with route caching is another example of an intelligent network component.
Yet another example of network intelligence that is receiving close attention these days is the characterization of content by its meaning (semantics). The obvious advantages that accrue with even a moderately successful semantic characterization component are such that almost everyone is tempted to dip a toe in the water. But assigning semantics to information on the Internet is the kind of undertaking that consumes vast amounts of resources.
Accordingly, a need remains for a way to assign semantic meaning to data without consuming large quantities of resources, and for a way to improve semantic understanding as information develops.
To find a context in which to answer a question, a directed set is constructed. The directed set comprises a plurality of elements and chains relating the concepts. One concept is identified as a maximal element. Chains are established in the directed set, connecting the maximal element to each concept in the directed set. More than one chain can connect the maximal element to each concept. A subset of the chains is selected to form a basis for the directed set. Each concept in the directed set is measured to determine how concretely each chain in the basis represents it. These measurements can be used to determine how closely related pairs of concepts are in the directed set.
The foregoing and other features, objects, and advantages of the invention will become more readily apparent from the following detailed description, which proceeds with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Computer system 105 further includes a concept identification unit (CIU) 130, a chain unit (CU) 135, a basis unit (BU) 140, and a measurement unit (MU) 145. Concept identification unit 130 is responsible for identifying the concepts that will form a directed set, from which the multi-dimensional semantic space can be mapped. One concept is identified as a maximal element: this element describes (more or less concretely) every concept in the directed set. Chain unit 135 is responsible for constructing chains from the maximal element to all other concepts identified by concept identification unit 130. Basis unit 140 is responsible for selecting a subset of the chains to form a basis for the directed set. Because basis unit 140 selects a subset of the chains established by chain unit 135, basis unit 140 is depicted as being part of chain unit 135. However, a person skilled in the art will recognize that basis unit 140 can be separate from chain unit 135. Measurement unit 145 is responsible for measuring how concretely each chain in the basis represents each concept. (How this measurement is performed is discussed below.) In the preferred embodiment, concept identification unit 130, chain unit 135, basis unit 140, and measurement unit 145 are implemented in software. However, a person skilled in the art will recognize that other implementations are possible. Finally, computer system 105 includes a data structure 150 (discussed with reference to
But how is a computer, such as computer system 105 in
Semantic Value
Whether the data expressing content on the network is encoded as text, binary code, bit map or in any other form, there is a vocabulary that is either explicitly (such as for code) or implicitly (as for bitmaps) associated with the form. The vocabulary is more than an arbitrarily-ordered list: an element of a vocabulary stands in relation to other elements, and the “place” of its standing is the semantic value of the element. For example, consider a spoon. Comparing the spoon with something taken from another scene—say, a shovel—one might classify the two items as being somewhat similar. And to the extent that form follows function in both nature and human artifice, this is correct! The results would be similar if the spoon were compared with a ladle. All three visual elements—the spoon, the shovel, and the ladle—are topologically equivalent; each element can be transformed into the other two elements with relatively little geometric distortion.
What happens when the spoon is compared with a fork? Curiously enough, both the spoon and the fork are topologically equivalent. But comparing the ratio of boundary to surface area reveals a distinct contrast. In fact, the attribute (boundary)/(surface area) is a crude analog of the fractal dimension of the element boundary.
Iconic Representation
Fractal dimension possesses a nice linear ordering. For example, a space-filling boundary such as a convoluted coastline (or a fork!) would have a higher fractal dimension than, say, the boundary of a circle. Can the topology of an element be characterized in the same way? In fact, one can assign a topological measure to the vocabulary elements, but the measure may involve aspects of homotopy and homology that preclude a simple linear ordering. Suppose, for visual simplicity, that there is some simple, linearly ordered way of measuring the topological essence of an element. One can formally represent an attribute space for the elements, where fork-like and spoon-like resolve to different regions in the attribute space. In this case, one might adopt the standard Euclidean metric for R2 with one axis for “fractal dimension” and another for “topological measure,” and thus have a well-defined notion of distance in attribute space. Of course, one must buy into all the hidden assumptions of the model. For example, is the orthogonality of the two attributes justified, i.e., are the attributes truly independent?
The example attribute space is a (simplistic) illustration of a semantic space, also known as a concept space. Above, the concern was with a vocabulary for human visual elements: a kind of visual lexicon. In fact, many researchers have argued for an iconic representation of meaning, particularly those looking for a representation unifying perception and language. They take an empirical positivist position that meaning is simply an artifact of the “binding” of language to perception, and point out that all writing originated with pictographs (even the letter “A” is just an inverted ox head!). With the exception of some very specialized vocabularies, it is an unfortunate fact that most iconic models have fallen well short of the mark. What is the visual imagery for the word “maybe”? For that matter, the above example iconic model has shown how spoons and forks are different, but how does it show them to be the same (i.e., cutlery)?
Propositional Representation
Among computational linguists, a leading competitive theory to iconic representation is propositional representation. A proposition is typically framed as a pairing of an argument and a predicate. For example, the fragment “a red car” could be represented prepositionally as the argument “a car” paired with the predicate “is red.” The proposition simply asserts a property (the predicate) of an object (the argument). In this example, stipulating the argument alone has consequences; “a car” invokes the existential quantifier, and asserts instances for all relevant primitive attributes associated with the lexical element “car.”
How about a phrase such as “every red car”? Taken by itself, the phrase asserts nothing—not even existence! It is a null proposition, and can be safely ignored. What about “every red car has a radio”? This is indeed making an assertion of sorts, but it is asserting a property of the semantic space itself. i.e., it is a meta-proposition. One can not instantiate a red car without a radio, nor can one remove a radio from a red car without either changing the color or losing the “car-ness” of the object. Propositions that are interpreted as assertions rather than as descriptions are called “meaning postulates.”
At this point the reader should begin to suspect the preeminent role of the predicate, and indeed would be right to do so. Consider the phrase, “the boy hit the baseball.”
The phrase has been transformed into two sets of attributes: the nominative attributes and two subsets of predicate attributes (verb and object). This suggests stipulating that all propositions must have the form (n: n E N, p: p E P), where N (the set of nominatives) is some appropriately restricted subset of (P) (the power set of the space P of predicates). N is restricted to avoid things like ((is adult) and (is adult)). In this way the predicates can be used to generate a semantic space. A semantic representation might even be possible for something like, “The movie The Boy Hit the Baseball hit this critic's heart-strings!”
Given that propositions can be resolved to sets of predicates, the way forward becomes clearer. If one were to characterize sets of predicates as clusters of points in an attribute space along with some notion of distance between clusters, one could quantify how close any two propositions are to each other. This is the Holy Grail.
Before leaving this section, observe that another useful feature of the propositional model is hierarchy of scope, at least at the sentence level and below. Consider the phrase, “the boy hit the spinning baseball.” The first-tier proposition is “x hit y.” The second-tier propositions are “x is-a boy,” and “y is-a baseball.” The third-tier proposition is “y is spinning.” By restricting the scope of the semantic space, attention can be focused on “hitting,” “hitting spinning things,” “people hitting things,” etc.
Hyponymy & Meaning Postulates—Mechanisms for Abstraction
Two elements of the lexicon are related by hyponymy if the meaning of one is included in the meaning of the other. For example, the words “cat” and “animal” are related by hyponymy. A cat is an animal, and so “cat” is a hyponym of “animal.”
A particular lexicon may not explicitly recognize some hyponymies. For example, the words “hit,” “touch,” “brush,” “stroke,” “strike,” and “ram” are all hyponyms of the concept “co-incident in some space or context.” Such a concept can be formulated as a meaning postulate, and the lexicon is extended with the meaning postulate in order to capture formally the hyponymy.
Note that the words “hit” and “strike” are also hyponyms of the word “realize” in the popular vernacular. Thus, lexical elements can surface in different hyponymies depending on the inclusion chain that is followed.
Topological Considerations
Now consider the metrization problem: how is the distance between two propositions determined? Many people begin by identifying a set S to work with (in this case, S=P, the set of predicates), and define a topology on S. A topology is a set O of subsets of S that satisfies the following criteria:
Any union of elements of O is in O.
Any finite intersection of elements of O is in O.
S and the empty set are both in O.
The elements of O are called the open sets of S. If X is a subset of S, and p is an element of S, then p is called a limit point of X if every open set that contains p also contains a point in X distinct from p.
Another way to characterize a topology is to identify a basis for the topology. A set B of subsets of S is a basis if
S=the union of all elements of B,
for pεbα∩bγ, (bα, bγεB), there exists bλεB such that pεbλ and bλ⊃bα∩bγ.
A subset of S is open if it is the union of elements of B. This defines a topology on S. Note that it is usually easier to characterize a basis for a topology rather than to explicitly identify all open sets. The space S is said to be completely separable if it has a countable basis.
It is entirely possible that there are two or more characterizations that yield the same topology. Likewise, one can choose two seemingly closely-related bases that yield nonequivalent topologies. As the keeper of the Holy Grail said to Indiana Jones, “Choose wisely!”
The goal is to choose as strong a topology as possible. Ideally, one looks for a compact metric space. One looks to satisfy separability conditions such that the space S is guaranteed to be homeomorphic to a subspace of Hilbert space (i.e., there is a continuous and one-to-one mapping from S to the subspace of Hilbert space). One can then adopt the Hilbert space metric. Failing this, as much structure as possible is imposed. To this end, consider the following axioms (the so-called “trennungaxioms”).
Note that a set X in S is said to be closed if the complement of X is open. Since the intention is not to take the reader through the equivalent of a course in topology, simply observe that the distinctive attributes of T3 and T4 spaces are important enough to merit a place in the mathematical lexicon—T3 spaces are called regular spaces, and T4 spaces are called normal spaces—and the following very beautiful theorem:
So, if there is a countable basis for S that satisfies T3, then S is metrizable. The metrized spaced S is denoted as (S, d).
Finally, consider , the set of all compact (non-empty) subsets of (S, d). Note that for u, vε, u∪vε; i.e., the union of two compact sets is itself compact. Define the pseudo-distance ξ(x, u) between the point xεS and the set uε as
ξ(x,u)=min{d(x,y):yεu}.
Using ξ define another pseudo-distance λ(u, v) from the set uε to the set vε:
λ(u,v)=max{ξ(x,v):xεu}.
Note that in general it is not true that λ(u, v)=λ(v, u). Finally, define the distance h(u, v) between the two sets u, vε as
h(u,v)=max{λ(u,v),λ(v,u)}.
The distance function h is called the Hausdorff distance. Since
If S is metrizable, then it is , h) wherein lurks that elusive beast, semantic value. For, consider the two propositions, ρ1=(ni, p1), ρ2=(n2, p2). Then the nominative distance |n2−n1| can be defined as h(
|ρ2−ρ1|=(|n2−n1|2+|p2−p1|2)1/2 Equation (1a)
or alternatively one might use “city block” distance:
|ρ2−ρ1|=|n2−n1|+βp2−p1| Equation (1b)
as a fair approximation of distance. Those skilled in the art will recognize that other metrics are also possible: for example:
(τ(ρ2,i−ρ1,i)n)1/n Equation (1c)
The reader may recognize , h) as the space of fractals. Some compelling questions come immediately to mind. Might one be able to find submonoids of contraction mappings corresponding to related sets in , h); related, for example, in the sense of convergence to the same collection of attractors? This could be a rich field to plow.
An Example Topology
Consider an actual topology on the set P of predicates. This is accomplished by exploiting the notion of hyponymy and meaning postulates.
Let P be the set of predicates, and let B be the set of all elements of 22, i.e., ((P)), that express hyponymy. B is a basis, if not of 2P, i.e., (P), then at least of everything worth talking about: S=∪(b: bεB). If bα, bγεB, neither containing the other, have a non-empty intersection that is not already an explicit hyponym, extend the basis B with the meaning postulate bα∩bγ. For example, “dog” is contained in both “carnivore” and “mammal.” So, even though the core lexicon may not include an entry equivalent to “carnivorous mammal,” it is a worthy meaning postulate, and the lexicon can be extended to include the intersection. Thus, B is a basis for S.
Because hyponymy is based on nested subsets, there is a hint of partial ordering on S. A partial order would be a big step towards establishing a metric.
At this point, a concrete example of a (very restricted) lexicon is in order.
In a chain, for any pair of concepts, one concept is closer to the maximal element than the other; the concept closer to the maximal element can be considered a lineal ancestor of the other concept. (Conversely, the second concept can be considered a lineal descendant of the first concept.) The maximal element is, by definition, closer to itself than any of the other concepts; therefore, the maximal element can be thought of as a lineal ancestor of all other concepts in the directed set (and all other concepts in the directed set can be considered lineal descendants of the maximal element).
Some observations about the nature of
Metrizing S
Maximal element (ME) 1310 stores the index to the maximal element in the directed set. In
Chains array 1315 is used to store the chains of the directed set. Chains array 1315 stores pairs of elements. One element identifies the concepts in a chain by index; the other element stores a numerical identifier. For example, chain 1317 stores a chain of concept indices “6”, “5”, “9”, “7”, and “2,” and is indexed by chain index “1” (1318). (Concept index 0, which does not occur in concepts array 1305, can be used in chains array 1315 to indicate the end of the chain. Additionally, although chain 1317 includes five concepts, the number of concepts in each chain can vary.) Using the indices of concepts array 1305, this chain corresponds to concepts “thing,” “energy,” “potential energy,” “matter,” and “dust.” Chains array 1315 shows one complete chain and part of a second chain, but there is no theoretical limit to the number of chains stored in chain array 1315. Observe that, because maximal element 1310 stores the concept index “6,” every chain in chains array 1315 should begin with concept index “6.” Ordering the concepts within a chain is ultimately helpful in measuring distances between the concepts. However concept order is not required. Further, there is no required order to the chains as they are stored in chains array 1315.
Basis chains array 1320 is used to store the chains of chains array 1315 that form a basis of the directed set. Basis chains array 1320 stores chain indices into chains array 1315. Basis chains array 1320 shows four chains in the basis (chains 1, 4, 8, and 5), but there is no theoretical limit to the number of chains in the basis for the directed set.
Euclidean distance matrix 1325A stores the distances between pairs of concepts in the directed set of
Angle subtended matrix 1325B is an alternative way to store the distance between pairs of concepts. Instead of measuring the distance between the state vectors representing the concepts (see below), the angle between the state vectors representing the concepts is measured. This angle will vary between 0 and 90 degrees. The narrower the angle is between the state vectors representing the concepts, the more closely related the concepts are. As with Euclidean distance matrix 1325A, angle subtended matrix 1325B uses the indices 1306 of the concepts array for the row and column indices of the matrix. For a given pair of row and column indices into angle subtended matrix 1325B, the entry at the intersection of that row and column in angle subtended matrix 1325B shows the angle subtended the state vectors for the concepts with the row and column concept indices, respectively. For example, the angle between concepts “man” and “dust” is approximately 51 degrees, whereas the angle between concepts “man” and “iguana” is approximately 42 degrees. This suggests that “man” is closer to “iguana” than “man” is to “dust.” As with Euclidean distance matrix 1325A, angle subtended matrix 1325B is symmetrical.
Not shown in
Although the data structure for concepts array 1305, maximal element 1310 chains array 1315, and basis chains array 1320 in
Returning to
f:μthing=f1of2of3o . . . ofn
where the chain connects n+1 concepts, and fj: links the (n−j)th predecessor of μ with the (n+1−j)th predecessor of μ, 1≦j≦n. For example, with reference to
Consider the set of all such functions for all minimal nodes. Choose a countable subset {fk} of functions from the set. For each fk construct a function gk: SI1 as follows. For sεS, S is in relation (under hyponymy) to “thing” 305. Therefore, s is in relation to at least one predecessor of μ, the minimal element of the (unique) chain associated with fk. Then there is a predecessor of smallest index (of μ), say the mth, that is in relation to s. Define:
gk(s)=(n−m)/n Equation (2)
This formula gives a measure of concreteness of a concept to a given chain associated with function fk.
As an example of the definition of gk, consider chain 505 of
Finally, define the vector valued function φ: SRk relative to the indexed set of scalar functions {g1, g2, g3, . . . , gk} (where scalar functions {g1, g2, g3, . . . , gk} are defined according to Equation (2)) as follows:
φ(s)=<g1(s), g2(s), g3(s), . . . , gk(s)> Equation (3)
This state vector p(s) maps a concept s in the directed set to a point in k-space (Rk). One can measure distances between the points (the state vectors) in k-space. These distances provide measures of the closeness of concepts within the directed set. The means by which distance can be measured include distance functions, such as Equations (1a), (1b), or (1c). Further, trigonometry dictates that the distance between two vectors is related to the angle subtended between the two vectors, so means that measure the angle between the state vectors also approximates the distance between the state vectors. Finally, since only the direction (and not the magnitude) of the state vectors is important, the state vectors can be normalized to the unit sphere. If the state vectors are normalized, then the angle between two state vectors is no longer an approximation of the distance between the two state vectors, but rather is an exact measure.
The functions gk are analogous to step functions, and in the limit (of refinements of the topology) the functions are continuous. Continuous functions preserve local topology; i.e., “close things” in S map to “close things” in Rk, and “far things” in S tend to map to “far things” in Rk.
Example Results
The following example results show state vectors φ(s) using chain 505 as function g1, chain 510 as function g2, and so on through chain 540 as function g8.
φ(“boy”)<¾, 5/7, ⅘, ¾, 7/9, ⅚, 1, 6/7>
φ(“dust”)<⅜, 3/7, 3/10, 1, 1/9, 0, 0, 0>
φ(“iguana”)<½, 1, ½, ¾, 5/9, 0, 0, 0>
φ(“woman”)<⅞, 5/7, 9/10, ¾, 8/9, ⅔, 5/7, 5/7>
φ(“man”)<1, 5/7, 1, ¾, 1, 1, 5/7, 5/7>
Using these state vectors, the distances between concepts and the angles subtended between the state vectors are as follows:
From these results, the following comparisons can be seen:
All other tests done to date yield similar results. The technique works consistently well.
How It (Really) Works
As described above, construction of the φ transform is (very nearly) an algorithm. In effect, this describes a recipe for metrizing a lexicon—or for that matter, metrizing anything that can be modeled as a directed set—but does not address the issue of why it works. In other words, what's really going on here? To answer this question, one must look to the underlying mathematical principles.
First of all, what is the nature of S? Earlier, it was suggested that a propositional model of the lexicon has found favor with many linguists. For example, the lexical element “automobile” might be modeled as:
In principle, there might be infinitely many such properties, though practically speaking one might restrict the cardinality to (countably infinite) in order to ensure that the properties are addressable. If one were disposed to do so, one might require that there be only finitely many properties associated with a lexical element. However, there is no compelling reason to require finiteness.
At any rate, one can see that “automobile” is simply an element of the power set of P, the set of all propositions; i.e., it is an element of the set of all subsets of P. The power set is denoted as (P). Note that the first two properties of the “automobile” example express “is a” relationships. By “is a” is meant entailment. Entailment means that, were one to intersect the properties of every element of (P) that is called, for example, “machine,” then the intersection would contain a subset of properties common to anything (in (P)) that one has, does, will or would have called “machine.” Reliance on the existence of a “least” common subset of properties to define entailment has a hint of well ordering about it; and indeed it is true that the axiom of choice is relied on to define entailment.
For the moment, restrict the notion of meaning postulate to that of entailment. Let B={bα} be the set of elements of ((P)) that correspond to good meaning postulates; e.g., bmεB is the set of all elements of (P) that entail “machine.” By “good” is meant complete and consistent. “Complete” means non-exclusion of objects that should entail (some concept). “Consistent” means exclusion of objects that should not entail (any concept). Should/should-not are understood to be negotiated between the community (of language users) and its individuals.
Note that if the intersection of bβ and bγ is non-empty, then bβ∩bγ is a “good” meaning postulate, and so must be in B. Define the set S=∪bα to be the lexicon. A point of S is an element of (P) that entails at least one meaning postulate.
B was deliberately constructed to be the basis of a topology τ for S. In other words, an open set in S is defined to be the union of elements of B. This is what is meant when one says that hyponymy is used to define the topology of the lexicon (in this particular embodiment).
The separability properties of S are reflected in the Genus/Species relationships of the unfolding inclusion chains. The T0-T4 trennungsaxioms are adopted. Now consider the set of bounded continuous real valued functions on S.
The use of g to denote the function was not accidental; it should evoke the scalar coordinate functions {g1, g2, g3, . . . , gk} defined per Equation (2) above. A proof of the lemma can be found in almost any elementary general topology book.
The end is in sight! Before invoking a final theorem of Urysohn's and completing the metrication of S, the notion of a Hilbert coordinate space must be introduced.
Consider the set H of all sequences γ={γ1, γ2, γ3, . . . } such that τ∞, γi2 converges. Define the metric:
on the set H, and denote the Hilbert coordinate space (H, d).
If the sequence {γ1, γ2, γ3, . . . } is considered as a vector, one can think of Hilbert space as a kind of “super” Euclidean space. Defining vector addition and scalar multiplication in the usual way, it is no great feat to show that the resultant vector is in H. Note that the standard inner product works just fine.
Before the metric space equivalent to the topological space (S, τ) can be found, one last theorem is needed.
In looking for a metric space equivalent to the topological space (S, τ), Urysohn's lemma should be a strong hint to the reader that perhaps (H, d) should be considered.
This theorem is proven by actually constructing the homeomorphism.
Proof: Let B1, B2, . . . Bn, . . . be a countable basis for S. In view of Theorem 2, there are pairs Bi, Bj, such that
(s)={g1(s), g2(s)/2, g3(s)/3, . . . , gn(s)/n, . . . }
for each point s in S. It remains to prove that the function so defined is continuous, one-to-one, and open.
The original proof (in its entirety) of Theorem 3 is available in the literature. When is applied to a lexicon with the entailment topology, it is herein called the Bohm transformation. Clearly, the finite-dimensional transform (P is an approximation of the Bohm transform, mapping the explicate order of the lexicon to a (shallow) implicate order in Rk.
Now that the mathematical basis for constructing and using a lexicon has been presented, the process of constructing the lexical semantic space can be explained.
A person skilled in the art will recognize that, although
A person skilled in the art will recognize that, although
Assume that at this point, the directed set learns that a Venus Flytrap is some kind of plant, and not an animal. As shown in
Having illustrated and described the principles of our invention in a preferred embodiment thereof, it should be readily apparent to those skilled in the art that the invention can be modified in arrangement and detail without departing from such principles. We claim all modifications coming within the spirit and scope of the accompanying claims.
This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/562,337, filed en-Nov. 21, 2006, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,475,008, issued Jan. 6, 2009, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/512,963, filed Feb. 25, 2000, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,152,031, issued Dec. 19, 2006, which is related to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/109,804, titled “METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR SEMANTIC CHARACTERIZATION,” filed Jul. 2, 1998, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,108,619, issued Aug. 22, 2000, which is hereby incorporated by reference for all purposes.
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Child | 11562337 | US |