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Computing the semantic similarity of geographic terms using volunteered lexical definitions
Date Issued
2013-09-02
Date Available
2014-09-02T03:00:08Z
Abstract
Volunteered geographic information (VGI) is generated by heterogenous ‘information communities’ that co-operate to produce reusable units of geographic knowledge. A consensual lexicon is a key factor to enable this open production model. Lexical definitions help demarcate the boundaries of terms, forming a thin semantic ground on which knowledge can travel. In VGI, lexical definitions often appear to be inconsistent, circular, noisy and highly idiosyncratic. Computing the semantic similarity of these ‘volunteered lexical definitions’ has a wide range of applications in GIScience, including information retrieval, data mining and information integration. This article describes a knowledge-based approach to quantify the semantic similarity of lexical definitions. Grounded in the recursive intuition that similar terms are described using similar terms, the approach relies on paraphrase-detection techniques and the lexical database WordNet. The cognitive plausibility of the approach is evaluated in the context of the OpenStreetMap (OSM) Semantic Network, obtaining high correlation with human judgements. Guidelines are provided for the practical usage of the approach.
Sponsorship
Science Foundation Ireland
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Journal
International Journal of Geographical Information Science
Volume
27
Issue
10
Start Page
2099
End Page
2118
Copyright (Published Version)
2013, Taylor & Francis
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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Name
2013-Semantic_Similarity_of_Geographic_Terms_VGI-Ballatore_et_al.pdf
Size
447.29 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
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