Part-of-Speech Tagging
Part-of-speech (POS) tagging is the task of assigning each word (token) in a text its grammatical category — noun, verb, adjective, preposition, and finer distinctions such as past-tense verb or comparative adjective — drawn from a fixed tagset. Because the same word form can belong to different categories depending on context ("book a flight" versus "read a book"), tagging is fundamentally a disambiguation problem solved with contextual evidence. It is one of the oldest and most foundational tasks in natural language processing and corpus linguistics, supplying the grammatical layer on which concordancing, parsing, register analysis, and information extraction all depend. Modern taggers reach accuracies well above 97% on standard English benchmarks, using statistical sequence models or neural networks trained on annotated corpora.
Kilderegister
Siteringer kopiert ordrett fra metodens kilderegister. Ingen påstandsnivåverifisering er underforstått fra dem.
- Manning, C. D., Raghavan, P., & Schütze, H. (2008). Introduction to Information Retrieval. Cambridge University Press. · ISBN 9780521865715
- Jurafsky, D., & Martin, J. H. (2023). Speech and Language Processing (3rd ed. draft). Stanford University. · URL
- Marcus, M. P., Marcinkiewicz, M. A., & Santorini, B. (1993). Building a large annotated corpus of English: The Penn Treebank. Computational Linguistics, 19(2), 313–330. · URL
Kuraterte påstander
Påstander lagret i bevishovedboken, hver med sin egen vurdering.
Denne visningen finner ikke opp en påstandsvurdering når hovedboken ikke har noen.
Relaterte metoder
Generert fra metodegrafen og vist som maskinforslåtte relasjoner – ingen bevispåstand er underforstått.