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Rhetorical structure theory

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rhetorical structure theory (RST) is a theory of text organization that describes relations that hold between parts of text. It was originally developed by William Mann, Sandra Thompson, Christian M. I. M. Matthiessen and others at the University of Southern California's Information Sciences Institute (ISI) and defined in a 1988 paper.[1][2][3] The theory was developed as part of studies of computer-based text generation. Natural language researchers later began using RST in text summarization and other applications. It explains coherence by postulating a hierarchical, connected structure of texts.[3] In 2000, Daniel Marcu, also of ISI, demonstrated that practical discourse parsing and text summarization also could be achieved using RST.[4][5][6]

Rhetorical relations

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Rhetorical relations or coherence relations or discourse relations are paratactic (coordinate) or hypotactic (subordinate) relations that hold across two or more text spans.[7] It is widely accepted that notion of coherence is through text relations like this. RST using rhetorical relations provide a systematic way for an analyst to analyse the text. An analysis is usually built by reading the text and constructing a tree using the relations. The following example is a title and summary, appearing at the top of an article in Scientific American magazine (Ramachandran and Anstis, 1986). The original text, broken into numbered units, is:[3]

Diagram of RST analysis
  1. [Title:] The Perception of Apparent Motion
  2. [Abstract:] When the motion of an intermittently seen object is ambiguous
  3. the visual system resolves confusion
  4. by applying some tricks that reflect a built-in knowledge of properties of the physical world

In the figure, numbers 1,2,3,4 show the corresponding units as explained above. The fourth unit and the third unit form a relation "Means". The third unit is the essential part of this relation, so it is called the nucleus of the relation and fourth unit is called the satellite of the relation. Similarly second unit to third and fourth unit is forming relation "Condition". All units are also spans and spans may be composed of more than one unit.

Nuclearity in discourse

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RST establishes two different types of units. Nuclei are considered as the most important parts of text whereas satellites contribute to the nuclei and are secondary. Nucleus contains basic information and satellite contains additional information about nucleus. The satellite is often incomprehensible without nucleus, whereas a text where a satellites have been deleted can be understood to a certain extent.

Hierarchy in the analysis

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RST relations are applied recursively in a text, until all units in that text are constituents in an RST relation. The result of such analyses is that RST structure are typically represented as trees, with one top level relation that encompasses other relations at lower levels.

Why RST?

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  1. From linguistic point of view, RST proposes a different view of text organization than most linguistic theories.
  2. RST points to a tight relation between relations and coherence in text
  3. From a computational point of view, it provides a characterization of text relations that has been implemented in different systems and for applications as text generation[8] and summarization.[9]

In design rationale

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Computer scientists Ana Cristina Bicharra Garcia and Clarisse Sieckenius de Souz have used RST as the basis of a design rationale system called ADD+.[10][11] In ADD+, RST is used as the basis for the rhetorical organization of a knowledge base, in a way comparable to other knowledge representation systems such as issue-based information system (IBIS).[11] Similarly, RST has been used in representation schemes for argumentation.[12][13][14]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Mann, William C.; Thompson, Sandra A. (1988). "Rhetorical structure theory: toward a functional theory of text organization" (PDF). Text: Interdisciplinary Journal for the Study of Discourse. 8 (3): 243–281. doi:10.1515/text.1.1988.8.3.243. S2CID 60514661. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
  2. ^ Matthiessen, Christian M. I. M. (June 2005). "Remembering Bill Mann". Computational Linguistics. 31 (2): 161–171. doi:10.1162/0891201054224002. S2CID 19688915. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
  3. ^ a b c Taboada, Maite; Mann, William C. (June 2006). "Rhetorical structure theory: looking back and moving ahead" (PDF). Discourse Studies. 8 (3): 423–459. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.216.381. doi:10.1177/1461445606061881. S2CID 2386531.
  4. ^ Marcu, Daniel (2000). The theory and practice of discourse parsing and summarization. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0262133722. OCLC 43811223.
  5. ^ Carlson, Lynn; Marcu, Daniel; Okurowski, Mary Ellen (2003) [2001]. "Building a discourse-tagged corpus in the framework of rhetorical structure theory" (PDF). In Kuppevelt, Jan van; Smith, Ronnie W. (eds.). Current and new directions in discourse and dialogue. Text, speech, and language technology. Vol. 22. Dordrecht; Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 85–112. doi:10.1007/978-94-010-0019-2_5. ISBN 978-1402016141. OCLC 53097055.
  6. ^ "Timeline". isi.edu. Information Sciences Institute. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
  7. ^ Taboada, Maite (2009). "Implicit and explicit coherence relations" (PDF). In Renkema, Jan (ed.). Discourse, of course: an overview of research in discourse studies. Amsterdam; Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company. pp. 127–140. doi:10.1075/z.148.13tab. ISBN 9789027232588. OCLC 276996573.
  8. ^ "RST and text generation". ccl.pku.edu.cn. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
  9. ^ Uzêda, Vinícius Rodrigues; Pardo, Thiago Alexandre Salgueiro; Nunes, Maria das Graças Volpe (November 2008). "Evaluation of automatic text summarization methods based on rhetorical structure theory" (PDF). Eighth International Conference on Intelligent Systems Design and Applications: Kaohsiung, Taiwan, 26–28 November 2008. ISDA'08. Vol. 2. Piscataway, NJ: IEEE. pp. 389–394. doi:10.1109/ISDA.2008.289. ISBN 978-0-7695-3382-7. S2CID 16331006. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
  10. ^ Garcia, Ana Cristina Bicharra; Souz, Clarisse Sieckenius de (April 1997). "ADD+: including rhetorical structures in active documents" (PDF). AI EDAM: Artificial Intelligence for Engineering Design, Analysis and Manufacturing. 11 (2): 109–124. doi:10.1017/S0890060400001906.
  11. ^ a b Regli, William C.; Hu, Xiaochun; Atwood, Michael; Sun, Wei (December 2000). "A survey of design rationale systems: approaches, representation, capture and retrieval" (PDF). Engineering with Computers. 16 (3–4): 209–235. doi:10.1007/PL00013715. S2CID 6394458.
  12. ^ Green, Nancy L. (August 2009). "Representation of argumentation in text with rhetorical structure theory". Argumentation. 24 (2): 181–196. doi:10.1007/s10503-009-9169-4. S2CID 145388742.
  13. ^ Green, Nancy L. (November 2015). "Annotating evidence-based argumentation in biomedical text". 2015 IEEE International Conference on Bioinformatics and Biomedicine (BIBM), Washington, DC, USA, 9–12 November 2015. Piscataway, NJ: IEEE. pp. 922–929. doi:10.1109/BIBM.2015.7359807. ISBN 978-1-4673-6799-8. OCLC 972619754. S2CID 7821394.
  14. ^ Mitrović, Jelena; O'Reilly, Cliff; Mladenović, Miljana; Handschuh, Siegfried (January 2017). "Ontological representations of rhetorical figures for argument mining". Argument & Computation. 8 (3): 267–287. doi:10.3233/AAC-170027.