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Journal ArticleDOI

A Survey of Text Similarity Approaches

18 Apr 2013-International Journal of Computer Applications (Foundation of Computer Science (FCS))-Vol. 68, Iss: 13, pp 13-18
TL;DR: This survey discusses the existing works on text similarity through partitioning them into three approaches; String-based, Corpus-based and Knowledge-based similarities, and samples of combination between these similarities are presented.
Abstract: Measuring the similarity between words, sentences, paragraphs and documents is an important component in various tasks such as information retrieval, document clustering, word-sense disambiguation, automatic essay scoring, short answer grading, machine translation and text summarization. This survey discusses the existing works on text similarity through partitioning them into three approaches; String-based, Corpus-based and Knowledge-based similarities. Furthermore, samples of combination between these similarities are presented. General Terms Text Mining, Natural Language Processing. Keywords BasedText Similarity, Semantic Similarity, String-Based Similarity, Corpus-Based Similarity, Knowledge-Based Similarity. NeedlemanWunsch 1. INTRODUCTION Text similarity measures play an increasingly important role in text related research and applications in tasks Nsuch as information retrieval, text classification, document clustering, topic detection, topic tracking, questions generation, question answering, essay scoring, short answer scoring, machine translation, text summarization and others. Finding similarity between words is a fundamental part of text similarity which is then used as a primary stage for sentence, paragraph and document similarities. Words can be similar in two ways lexically and semantically. Words are similar lexically if they have a similar character sequence. Words are similar semantically if they have the same thing, are opposite of each other, used in the same way, used in the same context and one is a type of another. DistanceLexical similarity is introduced in this survey though different String-Based algorithms, Semantic similarity is introduced through Corpus-Based and Knowledge-Based algorithms. String-Based measures operate on string sequences and character composition. A string metric is a metric that measures similarity or dissimilarity (distance) between two text strings for approximate string matching or comparison. Corpus-Based similarity is a semantic similarity measure that determines the similarity between words according to information gained from large corpora. Knowledge-Based similarity is a semantic similarity measure that determines the degree of similarity between words using information derived from semantic networks. The most popular for each type will be presented briefly. This paper is organized as follows: Section two presents String-Based algorithms by partitioning them into two types character-based and term-based measures. Sections three and four introduce Corpus-Based and knowledge-Based algorithms respectively. Samples of combinations between similarity algorithms are introduced in section five and finally section six presents conclusion of the survey.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the authors propose a logic-based framework to characterize nexus of similarity between tuples of entities within a knowledge base, and analyze the computational complexity aspects of this framework.
Abstract: Similarities between entities occur frequently in many real-world scenarios. For over a century, researchers in different fields have proposed a range of approaches to measure the similarity between entities. More recently, inspired by"Google Sets", significant academic and commercial efforts have been devoted to expanding a given set of entities with similar ones. As a result, existing approaches nowadays are able to take into account properties shared by entities, hereinafter called nexus of similarity. Accordingly, machines are largely able to deal with both similarity measures and set expansions. To the best of our knowledge, however, there is no way to characterize nexus of similarity between entities, namely identifying such nexus in a formal and comprehensive way so that they are both machine- and human-readable; moreover, there is a lack of consensus on evaluating existing approaches for weakly similar entities. As a first step towards filling these gaps, we aim to complement existing literature by developing a novel logic-based framework to formally and automatically characterize nexus of similarity between tuples of entities within a knowledge base. Furthermore, we analyze computational complexity aspects of this framework.
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors proposed models for searching and recommending learning resources to meet the needs of learners, helping to achieve better student performance results, and suggested a general architecture for search and recommendation learning resources, which is feasible for classification, search, ranking prediction, and recommendation of learning resources in higher education institutions.
Abstract: Abstract This study proposes models for searching and recommending learning resources to meet the needs of learners, helping to achieve better student performance results. The study suggests a general architecture for searching and recommending learning resources. It specifically proposes (1) the model of learning resource classification based on deep learning techniques such as MLP; (2) the approach for searching learning resources based on document similarity; (3) the model to predict learning performance using deep learning techniques including learning performance prediction model on all student data using CNN, another model on ability group using MLP, and the other model on per student using LSTM; (4) the learning resource recommendation model using deep matrix factorization. Experimental results show that the proposed models are feasible for the classification, search, ranking prediction, and recommendation of learning resources in higher education institutions.
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the authors proposed the Neighbourhood-based assistance-driven non-negative matrix factorization (NMF) method to handle high-dimensional sparse short-text representation with lower-dimensional projection effectively.
Abstract: Social media such as Twitter connect billions of people by allowing them to exchange their thoughts via short-text communication. Topic modelling is a widely used technique for analysing short texts. Discovering topic clusters in short-text collections faces issues with distance-based, density-based and dimensionality reduction-based methods due to their higher dimensionality and short length which results in extremely sparse text representation matrices. We propose the ‘neighbourhood-based assistance’-driven non-negative matrix factorization (NMF) method to handle high-dimensional sparse short-text representation with lower-dimensional projection effectively. We utilized NMF that aligned with the natural non-negativity of text data coupled with the symmetric document affinity information to identify topic distribution in the short text. Neighbourhood information within documents is captured using Jaccard similarity to assist information loss, resulting in higher-to-lower-dimensional projection. Experimental results with Twitter data sets show that the proposed approach is able to attain high accuracy compared to state-of-the-art methods quantitatively, while qualitative analysis with case studies validates the ability of the proposed approach in generating meaningful topic clusters.
References
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TL;DR: The lexical database: nouns in WordNet, Katherine J. Miller a semantic network of English verbs, and applications of WordNet: building semantic concordances are presented.
Abstract: Part 1 The lexical database: nouns in WordNet, George A. Miller modifiers in WordNet, Katherine J. Miller a semantic network of English verbs, Christiane Fellbaum design and implementation of the WordNet lexical database and searching software, Randee I. Tengi. Part 2: automated discovery of WordNet relations, Marti A. Hearst representing verb alterations in WordNet, Karen T. Kohl et al the formalization of WordNet by methods of relational concept analysis, Uta E. Priss. Part 3 Applications of WordNet: building semantic concordances, Shari Landes et al performance and confidence in a semantic annotation task, Christiane Fellbaum et al WordNet and class-based probabilities, Philip Resnik combining local context and WordNet similarity for word sense identification, Claudia Leacock and Martin Chodorow using WordNet for text retrieval, Ellen M. Voorhees lexical chains as representations of context for the detection and correction of malapropisms, Graeme Hirst and David St-Onge temporal indexing through lexical chaining, Reem Al-Halimi and Rick Kazman COLOR-X - using knowledge from WordNet for conceptual modelling, J.F.M. Burg and R.P. van de Riet knowledge processing on an extended WordNet, Sanda M. Harabagiu and Dan I Moldovan appendix - obtaining and using WordNet.

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TL;DR: A computer adaptable method for finding similarities in the amino acid sequences of two proteins has been developed and it is possible to determine whether significant homology exists between the proteins to trace their possible evolutionary development.

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01 Jul 1945-Ecology

10,500 citations


"A Survey of Text Similarity Approac..." refers background in this paper

  • ...Dice’s coefficient is defined as twice the number of common terms in the compared strings divided by the total number of terms in both strings [11]....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This letter extends the heuristic homology algorithm of Needleman & Wunsch (1970) to find a pair of segments, one from each of two long sequences, such that there is no other Pair of segments with greater similarity (homology).

10,262 citations


"A Survey of Text Similarity Approac..." refers background in this paper

  • ...It is useful for dissimilar sequences that are suspected to contain regions of similarity or similar sequence motifs within their larger sequence context [8]....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A new general theory of acquired similarity and knowledge representation, latent semantic analysis (LSA), is presented and used to successfully simulate such learning and several other psycholinguistic phenomena.
Abstract: How do people know as much as they do with as little information as they get? The problem takes many forms; learning vocabulary from text is an especially dramatic and convenient case for research. A new general theory of acquired similarity and knowledge representation, latent semantic analysis (LSA), is presented and used to successfully simulate such learning and several other psycholinguistic phenomena. By inducing global knowledge indirectly from local co-occurrence data in a large body of representative text, LSA acquired knowledge about the full vocabulary of English at a comparable rate to schoolchildren. LSA uses no prior linguistic or perceptual similarity knowledge; it is based solely on a general mathematical learning method that achieves powerful inductive effects by extracting the right number of dimensions (e.g., 300) to represent objects and contexts. Relations to other theories, phenomena, and problems are sketched.

6,014 citations


"A Survey of Text Similarity Approac..." refers methods in this paper

  • ...The GLSA approach can combine any kind of similarity measure on the space of terms with any suitable method of dimensionality reduction....

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  • ...LSA assumes that words that are close in meaning will occur in similar pieces of text....

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  • ...Latent Semantic Analysis (LSA) [15] is the most popular technique of Corpus-Based similarity....

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  • ...Generalized Latent Semantic Analysis (GLSA) [16] is a framework for computing semantically motivated term and document vectors....

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  • ...Mining the web for synonyms: PMIIR versus LSA on TOEFL....

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