Recognizing textual entailment: Rational, evaluation and approaches: Rational, evaluation and approaches

Ido Dagan, Bill Dolan, Bernardo Magnini, Dan Roth

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

20 Scopus citations

Abstract

The goal of identifying textual entailment ? whether one piece of text can be plausibly inferred from another ? has emerged in recent years as a generic core problem in natural language understanding. Work in this area has been largely driven by the PASCAL Recognizing Textual Entailment (RTE) challenges, which are a series of annual competitive meetings. The current work exhibits strong ties to some earlier lines of research, particularly automatic acquisition of paraphrases and lexical semantic relationships and unsupervised inference in applications such as question answering, information extraction and summarization. It has also opened the way to newer lines of research on more involved inference methods, on knowledge representations needed to support this natural language understanding challenge and on the use of learning methods in this context. RTE has fostered an active and growing community of researchers focused on the problem of applied entailment. This special issue of the JNLE provides an opportunity to showcase some of the most important work in this emerging area. Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2010.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)i-xvii
JournalNatural Language Engineering
Volume16
Issue number1
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2010

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