Semantic Features of Verbs
1.5.3.Semantic Features interact with different aspects of the grammar such as morphology or syntax
Verbs also have semantic features.
Ex. 1) darken, kill, uglify
-> cause
Ex. 2) swim, crawl, throw, fly, give, buy
-> go
Go: Change in location or possession
Eventive sentences still sound natural
when pas
natural phenomenon and literacy is promoted through natural, purposeful language function. It has as its foundation current knowledge about language development as a constructive, meaning-oriented process in which language is viewed as an authentic, natural, real-world experience, and language learning is perceived as taking place through functional reading and writing situations." (p. 458) (Lapp
Advantage
Bridge the semantic gap between users and retrieval system
Disadvantage
No one-to-one correspondence between words and meanings
Text-based image retrieval should be developed with the content-based image retrieval.
It seems plausible to assume that the source of the ambiguity of [an old French student] is structural in nature, and that part of the ambiguity relates to the fact that ‘old’ and ‘French’ has two different categorical functions above. We can support this analysis with empirical evidences according to syntactic, semantic, and phonological views.
1. Syntactic analysis
As you can see, [a
2.3. Compound retrieval
When using compound word, we can separate similar images such as sky and sea. This word is hard to be separated by color or shape. Text can be a useful vehicle by searching images. For example, we typed word 'blue', 'snow', and 'tree'. Although Google image retrieval is based in keyword and idee visual search lab is based in tag, we can get result which is similar to res