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LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov

LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

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Introduction Hamblin’s semantics for questions Every question denotes a set of propositions expressed by its possible answers Who came? {‘Bill came.’, ‘John came.’, ‘Dan came.’…} Is it raining? {‘It’s raining.’, ‘It’s not raining.’}

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Page 1: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

LTAG Semantics for Questions

Aleksandar Savkov

Page 2: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

Contents Introduction

Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper

Scope properties of wh-phrases Quantificational NPs Wh-phrases as quontifiers Multiple wh-questions Long-distance wh-dependencies Comparison to other approaches

Embedded interrogatives Ambiguity in multiple wh-questions References

Page 3: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

Introduction Hamblin’s semantics for questions

Every question denotes a set of propositions expressed by its possible answers

Who came?{‘Bill came.’, ‘John came.’, ‘Dan came.’…}

Is it raining?{‘It’s raining.’, ‘It’s not raining.’}

Page 4: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

Introduction Karttunen’s upgrade

Every question denotes a set of propositions expressing only true answers

Page 5: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

Introduction Goals of the paper (Romerom

Kallmeyer, Babko-Malaya 2004)

capture scope properties of quantificational elements within the question

achieve the correct semantics for interrogatives embedded under e.g. know

Page 6: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

Introduction Example of different scopes for wh-

and non-wh-quantifiers:

Page 7: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

Introduction Example for multiple wh-phrases:

Page 8: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

Introduction Example for correct semantics of

interrogatives:

Page 9: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

Scope properties of wh-phrases Quantificational NPs Wh-phrases as quontifiers Multiple wh-questions Long-distance wh-dependencies Comparison to other approaches

Page 10: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

Quantificational NPs We assume quantifiers as

everybody have a multi-component set containing an auxiliary tree (contributes to the scope part) and an initial tree (contributes the predicate argument)

Page 11: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

every(x,person(x,s0),laugh(x,s0))

Page 12: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

disambiguation: 3 -> l3, 4 -> l1

every(x,person(x,s0),laugh(x,s0))

Page 13: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

Wh-phrases as quantifiersRepeating the Karttunen style

Page 14: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases
Page 15: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases
Page 16: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

Wh-phrases as quontifiers

5 -> l4, 9 -> l5, 10 -> l2, 7 -> l6, 14 -> l7, 15 -> l1Q3:λp.p(s0) and some(x,person(x,s0),

p=λs.every(y,person(y,s/s0), like(x,y,s)))

Page 17: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

Multiple wh-questions To treat in situ wh-quantifiers

correctly we need the minimal scope of any NP substitution node

To achieve that we need both minimal scopes for wh- and non-wh-quantifiers

We will use the feature WH for the wh-quantifier and P for the non-wh

Page 18: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases
Page 19: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases
Page 20: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

Long-distance wh-dependencies

In long distance wh-dependencies, one must make sure that the wh-quantifier scopes over all verbs in the sentence in order to provide argument for the most embedded one.

Page 21: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

Long-distance wh-dependencies

Page 22: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

Comparison to other approaches Karttunen style semantics Ginzburg and Sag, 2000 Our approach

Page 23: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

Karttunen style semantics Draws distinction between wh-scope and

non-wh-scope Uses different semantic types for all the

relevant categories Wh-quantifiers combine with functions of

type from situations to sets of propositions

Thus all wh-quantifiers must scope over all non-wh-quantifiers

Page 24: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

Ginzburg and Sag Ontological distinction between

state-of-affairs (SOA) and propositions

One builds propositions, questions, outcomes and facts from SOAs

Non-wh-quantifiers have SOA nuclear scope and wh-quantifiers have proposition and thus the second one is wider

Page 25: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

Our approach We use a ‘flat’ semantic framework in the style

of MRS (Copestake et al.1999) Semantic contribution of the elementary and

auxiliary trees is a set of formulas No type distinction can be made to which of

the scope properties of wh- and non-wh-quantifiers could relate

No distinction between SOA and propositions MAXS, WH and P features and feature

unification are used to define appropriate scope windows.

Page 26: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

Embedded interrogatives Unless bound by an operator

situation arguments are replaced by the utterance situation

In embedded interrogatives the issue is how to bind the situation variable

Page 27: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

Embedded interrogatives

Page 28: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

Embedded interrogatives

Page 29: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

Ambiguity in multiple wh-questions

Some multiple wh-questions are ambiguous

Example:Who remembers where Mary keeps which book?

This could be read in two different ways:1) Bill remembers where Mary keeps which book.2) Joe remembers where Mary keeps Aspects and

Max remembers where Mary keeps Syntactic Structures

Page 30: LTAG Semantics for Questions Aleksandar Savkov. Contents Introduction Hamblin’s idea Karttunen’s upgrade Goals of the paper Scope properties of wh-phrases

References LTAG Semantics for Questions

(Romero, Kallmeyer, Babko-Malaya, 2004)

Syntax and semantics for questions (Karttunen)