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|Abstract=Much research has been done to combine the fields of Databases and Natural Language Processing. While many works focus on the problem of deriving a structured query for a given natural language question, the problem of query verbalization - translating a structured query into natural language - is less explored. In this work we describe our approach to verbalizing SPARQL queries in order to create natural language expressions that are readable and understandable by the human day-to-day user. These expressions are helpful when having search engines generate SPARQL queries for user-provided natural language questions or keywords and enable the user to check whether the right question has been understood. While our approach enables verbalization of only a subset of SPARQL 1.1, this subset applies to 85% of the 209 queries in our training set. These observations are based on a corpus of SPARQL queries consisting of datasets from the QALD-1 challenge and the ILD2012 challenge. | |Abstract=Much research has been done to combine the fields of Databases and Natural Language Processing. While many works focus on the problem of deriving a structured query for a given natural language question, the problem of query verbalization - translating a structured query into natural language - is less explored. In this work we describe our approach to verbalizing SPARQL queries in order to create natural language expressions that are readable and understandable by the human day-to-day user. These expressions are helpful when having search engines generate SPARQL queries for user-provided natural language questions or keywords and enable the user to check whether the right question has been understood. While our approach enables verbalization of only a subset of SPARQL 1.1, this subset applies to 85% of the 209 queries in our training set. These observations are based on a corpus of SPARQL queries consisting of datasets from the QALD-1 challenge and the ILD2012 challenge. | ||
− | (This is an extended version of the paper | + | (This is an extended version of the [[Inproceedings3267|ESWC 2012 ILD paper]]) |
− | |Download=ESWC2012-PP SPARQL.pdf, | + | |Download=ESWC2012-PP SPARQL.pdf, |
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Version vom 5. August 2014, 10:52 Uhr
SPARTIQULATION: Verbalizing SPARQL queries
SPARTIQULATION: Verbalizing SPARQL queries
Published: 2012
Mai
Buchtitel: Proceedings of the 11th Extended Semantic Web Conference,
Verlag: Springer
Referierte Veröffentlichung
Kurzfassung
[[Abstract::Much research has been done to combine the fields of Databases and Natural Language Processing. While many works focus on the problem of deriving a structured query for a given natural language question, the problem of query verbalization - translating a structured query into natural language - is less explored. In this work we describe our approach to verbalizing SPARQL queries in order to create natural language expressions that are readable and understandable by the human day-to-day user. These expressions are helpful when having search engines generate SPARQL queries for user-provided natural language questions or keywords and enable the user to check whether the right question has been understood. While our approach enables verbalization of only a subset of SPARQL 1.1, this subset applies to 85% of the 209 queries in our training set. These observations are based on a corpus of SPARQL queries consisting of datasets from the QALD-1 challenge and the ILD2012 challenge.
(This is an extended version of the ESWC 2012 ILD paper)]]
Download: Media:ESWC2012-PP SPARQL.pdf