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    Semantic Data Retrieval and Integration for Supporting Artworks Interpretation Through Integrative Narrative Networks

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    Significant recent advances in AI are progressively giving Digital Humanities a range of powerful tools to analyse and contextualise artworks using techniques from computer vision, pattern recognition, ontology engineering, natural language processing, and the semantic web. These tools help to analyse artworks and link them to insightful descriptions. However, to obtain the full potential of these tools we need to tackle two issues: (i) how to integrate the fragmented and sometimes contradictory information these various tools provide, and (ii) how to make it much easier for art historians, curators, and artists to use and extend these tools. This paper addressed these questions with a focus on semantic web information retrieval and integration. It introduces a data structure called an Integrative Narrative Network (INN) that supports the integration of information from different knowledge sources, which formally represents the process of understanding as a question-answering approach. It further introduces the ongoing development of a tool by which an art historian can build up narrative networks by retrieving and selecting information queried from online available Knowledge Graphs. In particular, we show how semantic web resources can help to raise questions and find answers to them, through the real case study of a Late Renaissance artwork interpretation

    Computational construction grammar and constructional change /

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    Includes bibliographical references.Computational construction grammar and constructional change / Katrien Beuls and Remi van Trijp -- Chopping down the syntax tree : what constructions can do instead / Remi van Trijp -- For a radically usage-based diachronic construction grammar / Dirk Noël -- Tracking shifts in the literal versus the intensifying fake reflexive resultative construction : the development of intensifying dood ‘dead’ in 19th–20th century Dutch / Emmeline Gyselinck and Timothy Colleman -- A reflection on constructionalization and constructional borrowing, inspired by an emerging Dutch replica of the ‘time’-away construction / Timothy Colleman -- Unidirectionality as a cycle of convention and innovation : micro-changes in the grammaticalization of [BE going to INF] / Peter Petré -- A boy named Sue : the semiotic dynamics of naming and identity / Luc Steels, Martin Loetzsch and Michael Spranger -- A gentle introduction to the minimal Naming Game / Andrea Baronchelli -- The evolution of lexical usage profiles in social networks / Gerhard Schaden -- Modelling pronominal gender agreement in Dutch : from a syntactic to a semantic strategy / Roxana Rădulescu and Katrien Beuls -- Embodied cognitive semantics for quantification / Simon Pauw and Joseph Hilferty -- Why are embodied experiments relevant to cognitive linguistics? / Javier Valenzuela, Joseph Hilferty and Oscar Vilarroya

    Making good on a promise

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    THE EMERGENCE OF MORPHOSYNTACTIC CASE SYSTEMS

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    How a Construction Grammar account solves the auxiliary controversy

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    Abstract The English auxiliaries have been a matter of dispute for decades with two opposing views: one analysis treats them as main verbs that take a VP complement; the other considers them as feature carriers. Proponents of both approaches have convincingly pointed out each other’s weaknesses without however settling the debate and without accounting for the fact that the English VP is still evolving today. The goal of this paper is to show that Construction Grammar offers a way out of the current status quo. This claim is substantiated by a computational formalization of the English verb phrase in Fluid Construction Grammar that includes a bi-directional processing model for formulation and comprehension available for online testing.</jats:p

    Feature matrices and agreement

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