Local Coherence in Stream-of-consciousness Discourse: A Centering Approach
Abstract
An evaluation metric comprising a battery of five-test criteria other than the standard Centering of “salience” and “cohesion” and Kibble’s version of “cohesion”, “salience”, “cheapness” and “no backward-looking center” is developed in this paper to involve “coherence”, “salience”, “cheapness”, “cohesion” and “no backward-looking center” in measuring the degree of coherence of different transition sequences in stream-of-consciousness (SOC) discourse on the premise of the distinction between coherence and cohesion. The addition of “coherence” and the distinction between lexical cohesion and cognitive and/or pragmatic coherence are crucial to the characterization of coherence in stream-of-consciousness discourse, which the Rule 2 of standard Centering cannot adequately capture. Cohesion mainly dwells upon semantic relatedness between two backward-looking centers, which can be resolved in frame semantics. Coherence cares more about relatedness between two backward-looking centers motivated by cognitive and/or pragmatic factors. In other words, two backward-looking centers may be semantically unrelated, but they strike up a relation with each other either temporarily or permanently due to cognitive and/or pragmatic factors.
Keywords
Full Text:
PDFReferences
Brennan, S. E., Friedman, M. W., & Pollard, C. J. (1987). A centering approach to pronouns. In Proceedings of the 25th Annual Meeting of the ACL (pp.155-162). Stanford, California.
Fais, L. (2004). Inferable centers, centering transitions, and the notion of coherence. Computational Linguistics, 30(2), 119-150.
Grosz, B. J., Joshi, A. K., & Weinstein, S. (1995). Centering: A framework for modeling the local coherence of discourse. Computational Linguistics, 21(2), 203-225.
Grosz, B. J., & Sidner, C. L. (1998). Lost intuitions and forgotten intentions. In Walker et al. (Eds.), Centering theory in discourse. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Kibble, R. (2001). A reformulation of rule 2 of centering theory. Computational Linguistics, 27(4): 579-587.
Kibble, R. J., Richard, D., & Power, J. (2000). An integrated framework for text planning and pronominalisation. In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Natural Language Generation (pp.77-84).
Matsui, T. (2000). Bridging and relevance. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Poesio, M. (2004a). The MATE/GNOME scheme for anaphoric annotation, revisited, Proceedings of SIGDIAL. Boston.
Prince, A., & Smolensky, P. (1997). Optimality: From neural networks to universal grammar. Science, 275, 1604-1610.
Strube, M., & Hahn, U. (1999). Functional centering: Grounding referential coherence in information structure. Computational Linguistics, 25(3), 309-344.
Taboada, M., & Zabala, H. (2008). Deciding on units of analysis within centering theory. Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory, 1, 63-108.
Walker, M. A., Iida, M., & Cote, S. (1994). Japanese discourse and the process of centering. Computational Linguistics, 20(2), 193-233.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3968/j.css.1923669720141001.4257
Refbacks
- There are currently no refbacks.
Copyright (c)
Reminder
- How to do online submission to another Journal?
- If you have already registered in Journal A, then how can you submit another article to Journal B? It takes two steps to make it happen:
1. Register yourself in Journal B as an Author
- Find the journal you want to submit to in CATEGORIES, click on “VIEW JOURNAL”, “Online Submissions”, “GO TO LOGIN” and “Edit My Profile”. Check “Author” on the “Edit Profile” page, then “Save”.
2. Submission
Online Submission: http://cscanada.org/index.php/css/submission/wizard
- Go to “User Home”, and click on “Author” under the name of Journal B. You may start a New Submission by clicking on “CLICK HERE”.
- We only use four mailboxes as follows to deal with issues about paper acceptance, payment and submission of electronic versions of our journals to databases: [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]
Articles published in Canadian Social Science are licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 (CC-BY).
Canadian Social Science Editorial Office
Address: 1020 Bouvier Street, Suite 400, Quebec City, Quebec, G2K 0K9, Canada.
Telephone: 1-514-558 6138
Website: Http://www.cscanada.net; Http://www.cscanada.org
E-mail:[email protected]; [email protected]
Copyright © Canadian Academy of Oriental and Occidental Culture