scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

A Survey of Text Similarity Approaches

Wael Hassan Gomaa, +1 more
- 18 Apr 2013 - 
- Vol. 68, Iss: 13, pp 13-18
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
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.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Authors. in profile

Marjorie V. Batey
- 01 Jan 1969 - 
Journal ArticleDOI

Network structure and influence of the climate change counter-movement

TL;DR: In this article, an application of network science reveals the institutional and corporate structure of the climate change counter-movement in the United States, while computational text analysis shows its influence in the news media and within political circles.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Cosine similarity to determine similarity measure: Study case in online essay assessment

TL;DR: This research implemented the weighting of Term Frequency - Inverse Document Frequency (TF-IDF) method and Cosine Similarity with the measuring degree concept of similarity terms in a document to rank the document weight that have closesness match level with expert's document.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

ECNU: One Stone Two Birds: Ensemble of Heterogenous Measures for Semantic Relatedness and Textual Entailment

TL;DR: This paper extracted seven types of features including text difference measures proposed in entailment judgement subtask, as well as common text similarity measures used in both subtasks to solve the both subtasking by considering them as a regression and a classification task respectively.
Journal ArticleDOI

Similarity encoding for learning with dirty categorical variables

TL;DR: In this paper, a generalization of one-hot encoding, similarity encoding, is proposed to build feature vectors from similarities across categories. But similarity encoding is not suitable for non-curated data.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Introduction to WordNet: An On-line Lexical Database

TL;DR: Standard alphabetical procedures for organizing lexical information put together words that are spelled alike and scatter words with similar or related meanings haphazardly through the list.
Posted Content

Using Information Content to Evaluate Semantic Similarity in a Taxonomy

TL;DR: In this article, a new measure of semantic similarity in an IS-A taxonomy based on the notion of information content is presented, and experimental evaluation suggests that the measure performs encouragingly well (a correlation of r = 0.79 with a benchmark set of human similarity judgments, with an upper bound of r < 0.90 for human subjects performing the same task).
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Verb semantics and lexical selection

Abstract: This paper will focus on the semantic representation of verbs in computer systems and its impact on lexical selection problems in machine translation (MT). Two groups of English and Chinese verbs are examined to show that lexical selection must be based on interpretation of the sentences as well as selection restrictions placed on the verb arguments. A novel representation scheme is suggested, and is compared to representations with selection restrictions used in transfer-based MT. We see our approach as closely aligned with knowledge-based MT approaches (KBMT), and as a separate component that could be incorporated into existing systems. Examples and experimental results will show that, using this scheme, inexact matches can achieve correct lexical selection.

Semantic Similarity Based on Corpus Statistics and Lexical Taxonomy

TL;DR: This paper presents a new approach for measuring semantic similarity/distance between words and concepts that combines a lexical taxonomy structure with corpus statistical information so that the semantic distance between nodes in the semantic space constructed by the taxonomy can be better quantified with the computational evidence derived from a distributional analysis of corpus data.
Related Papers (5)