Evaluating Contextualized Representations of (Spanish) Ambiguous Words: A New Lexical Resource and Empirical Analysis
Lexical ambiguity -- where a single wordform takes on distinct, context-dependent meanings -- serves as a useful tool to compare across different language models' (LMs') ability to form distinct, contextualized representations of the same stimulus. Few studies have systematically compared...
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Zusammenfassung: | Lexical ambiguity -- where a single wordform takes on distinct,
context-dependent meanings -- serves as a useful tool to compare across
different language models' (LMs') ability to form distinct, contextualized
representations of the same stimulus. Few studies have systematically compared
LMs' contextualized word embeddings for languages beyond English. Here, we
evaluate semantic representations of Spanish ambiguous nouns in context in a
suite of Spanish-language monolingual and multilingual BERT-based models. We
develop a novel dataset of minimal-pair sentences evoking the same or different
sense for a target ambiguous noun. In a pre-registered study, we collect
contextualized human relatedness judgments for each sentence pair. We find that
various BERT-based LMs' contextualized semantic representations capture some
variance in human judgments but fall short of the human benchmark. In
exploratory work, we find that performance scales with model size. We also
identify stereotyped trajectories of target noun disambiguation as a proportion
of traversal through a given LM family's architecture, which we partially
replicate in English. We contribute (1) a dataset of controlled, Spanish
sentence stimuli with human relatedness norms, and (2) to our evolving
understanding of the impact that LM specification (architectures, training
protocols) exerts on contextualized embeddings. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2406.14678 |