Unsupervised named-entity extraction from the Web: An experimental study
The KnowItAll system aims to automate the tedious process of extracting large collections of facts (e.g., names of scientists or politicians) from the Web in an unsupervised, domain-independent, and scalable manner. The paper presents an overview of KnowItAll's novel architecture and design pri...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Artificial intelligence 2005-06, Vol.165 (1), p.91-134 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The
KnowItAll system aims to automate the tedious process of extracting large collections of facts (e.g., names of scientists or politicians) from the Web in an unsupervised, domain-independent, and scalable manner. The paper presents an overview of
KnowItAll's novel architecture and design principles, emphasizing its distinctive ability to extract information without any hand-labeled training examples. In its first major run,
KnowItAll extracted over 50,000 class instances, but suggested a challenge: How can we improve
KnowItAll's recall and extraction rate without sacrificing precision?
This paper presents three distinct ways to address this challenge and evaluates their performance.
Pattern Learning learns domain-specific extraction rules, which enable additional extractions.
Subclass Extraction automatically identifies sub-classes in order to boost recall (e.g., “chemist” and “biologist” are identified as sub-classes of “scientist”).
List Extraction locates lists of class instances, learns a “wrapper” for each list, and extracts elements of each list. Since each method bootstraps from
KnowItAll's domain-independent methods, the methods also obviate hand-labeled training examples. The paper reports on experiments, focused on building lists of named entities, that measure the relative efficacy of each method and demonstrate their synergy. In concert, our methods gave
KnowItAll a 4-fold to 8-fold increase in recall at precision of 0.90, and discovered over 10,000 cities missing from the Tipster Gazetteer. |
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ISSN: | 0004-3702 1872-7921 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.artint.2005.03.001 |