Sense-annotated English Puns

A pun is a form of wordplay in which a word suggests two or more meanings by exploiting polysemy, homonymy, or phonological similarity to another word, for an intended humorous or rhetorical effect. Though a recurrent and expected feature in many discourse types, puns stymie traditional approaches to computational lexical semantics because they violate their one-sense-per-context assumption. This paper describes the first competitive evaluation for the automatic detection, location, and interpretation of puns. We describe the motivation for these tasks, the evaluation methods, and the manually annotated data set. Finally, we present an overview and discussion of the participating systems’ methodologies, resources, and results.

Identifier
Source https://tudatalib.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/handle/tudatalib/2445
Related Identifier https://doi.org/10.18653/v1/S17-2005
Metadata Access https://tudatalib.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/oai/openairedata?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_datacite&identifier=oai:tudatalib.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de:tudatalib/2445
Provenance
Creator Miller, Tristan; Hempelmann, Christian; Gurevych, Iryna
Publisher TU Darmstadt
Publication Year 2017
Rights Creative Commons Attribution 4.0; info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
OpenAccess true
Contact https://tudatalib.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/page/contact
Representation
Language English
Resource Type Dataset
Format application/octet-stream
Discipline Other