Towards a Discourse Level Coherence Structure

In this paper we argue that coherence relations between discourse units are ultimately based on mentioned discourse entities embedded in the units participating in the relation. Coherence relations as discussed in most literature ((Mann and Thompson, 1988), (Hobbs, 1985), (Grosz and Sidner, 1986) inter alia) are defined between text segments, where a text segment could range from a single utterance to the whole discourse. We show that these coherence relations are formed either directly or indirectly between embedded discourse entities. Other semantic entities might be derived via inference/s based on the mentioned entities and the complexity of these inferences determines some of the types of relations defined in literature. Hence, the coherence relations as defined by (Mann and Thompson, 1988), (Hobbs, 1985) inter alia, existing between text units is essentially an abstraction of these fundamental relations formed between embedded entities. We argue that any representation of discourse coherence structure should entail representation of information down to the resolution level of these embedded entities in order for such structures to be useful for automated language processing tasks. We also show that the commonly accepted tree structure ((Hobbs, 1985),(Marcu, 1996) inter alia) is not sufficient to represent discourse relations to such a resolution level, and propose a semi constrained directed graph as the alternative.

[1]  Megumi Kameyama,et al.  Intrasentential Centering: A Case Study , 1997, ArXiv.

[2]  Suzanne Stevenson,et al.  Automatic Verb Classification Based on Statistical Distributions of Argument Structure , 2001, CL.

[3]  Scott Weinstein,et al.  Centering: A Framework for Modeling the Local Coherence of Discourse , 1995, CL.

[4]  Massimo Poesio,et al.  Long Distance Pronominalisation and Global Focus , 1998, COLING-ACL.

[5]  Udo Hahn,et al.  Functional Centering - Grounding Referential Coherence in Information Structure , 1999, Comput. Linguistics.

[6]  Edward Gibson,et al.  Representing Discourse Coherence: A Corpus-Based Study , 2005, CL.

[7]  C. Fletcher Markedness and topic continuity in discourse processing , 1984 .

[8]  Alistair Knott,et al.  A data-driven methodology for motivating a set of coherence relations , 1996 .

[9]  Donia Scott,et al.  Document Structure , 2003, CL.

[10]  C. Pollard,et al.  Center for the Study of Language and Information , 2022 .

[11]  Daniel Marcu,et al.  Building Up Rhetorical Structure Trees , 1996, AAAI/IAAI, Vol. 2.

[12]  Julia Hirschberg,et al.  A Prosodic Analysis of Discourse Segments in Direction-Giving Monologues , 1996, ACL.

[13]  Focusing for Pronoun Resolution in Discourse: An Implementation , 2007 .

[14]  Daniel Marcu The rhetorical parsing of natural language texts , 1997 .

[15]  Udo Hahn,et al.  Centering in-the-large: computing referential discourse segments , 1997 .

[16]  P. Gordon,et al.  Pronominalization and discourse coherence, discourse structure and pronoun interpretation , 1995, Memory & cognition.

[17]  Candace L. Sidner,et al.  Attention, Intentions, and the Structure of Discourse , 1986, CL.

[18]  Scott Weinstein,et al.  Control of Inference: Role of Some Aspects of Discourse Structure-Centering , 1981, IJCAI.

[19]  Andrew Kehler,et al.  The Effect of Establishing Coherence in Ellipsis and Anaphora Resolution , 1993, ACL.

[20]  Matthew Stone,et al.  Anaphora and Discourse Structure , 2001, CL.

[21]  J. Hobbs On the coherence and structure of discourse , 1985 .

[22]  Jerry R. Hobbs Coherence and Coreference , 1979, Cogn. Sci..

[23]  William D. Marslen-Wilson,et al.  Producing Interpretable Discourse: The Establishment and Maintenance of Reference , 1982 .

[24]  Jeffrey L. Elman,et al.  Grammatical and Coherence-Based Factors in Pronoun Interpretation , 2006 .

[25]  Leo G. M. Noordman,et al.  Toward a taxonomy of coherence relations , 1992 .

[26]  Edward Gibson,et al.  Discourse coherence and pronoun resolution , 2004 .

[27]  David I. Beaver,et al.  The Optimization of Discourse Anaphora , 2004 .

[28]  Matthew Stone,et al.  Discourse Relations: A Structural and Presuppositional Account Using Lexicalised TAG , 1999, ACL.

[29]  Bonnie L. Webber,et al.  Discourse Deixis: Reference to Discourse Segments , 1988, ACL.

[30]  H. H. Clark,et al.  In search of referents for nouns and pronouns , 1979 .

[31]  Carl Pollard,et al.  A Centering Approach to Pronouns , 1987, ACL.

[32]  Daniel Marcu,et al.  An Empirical Investigation of the Relation Between Discourse Structure and Co-Reference , 2000, COLING.

[33]  William C. Mann,et al.  Rhetorical Structure Theory: Toward a functional theory of text organization , 1988 .

[34]  Joseph E. Grimes,et al.  The Thread of Discourse , 1984 .

[35]  Andrew Kehler,et al.  Coherence, reference, and the theory of grammar , 2002, CSLI lecture notes series.