enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Semantic similarity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semantic_similarity

    Semantic similarity is a metric defined over a set of documents or terms, where the idea of distance between items is based on the likeness of their meaning or semantic content [citation needed] as opposed to lexicographical similarity. These are mathematical tools used to estimate the strength of the semantic relationship between units of ...

  3. Semantic search - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semantic_search

    Some authors regard semantic search as a set of techniques for retrieving knowledge from richly structured data sources like ontologies and XML as found on the Semantic Web. [2] Such technologies enable the formal articulation of domain knowledge at a high level of expressiveness and could enable the user to specify their intent in more detail ...

  4. WordNet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WordNet

    WordNet is a lexical database of semantic relations between words that links words into semantic relations including synonyms, hyponyms, and meronyms. The synonyms are grouped into synsets with short definitions and usage examples. It can thus be seen as a combination and extension of a dictionary and thesaurus.

  5. Word2vec - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Word2vec

    In particular, words which appear in similar contexts are mapped to vectors which are nearby as measured by cosine similarity. This indicates the level of semantic similarity between the words, so for example the vectors for walk and ran are nearby, as are those for "but" and "however", and "Berlin" and "Germany".

  6. Explicit semantic analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Explicit_semantic_analysis

    ESA was designed by Evgeniy Gabrilovich and Shaul Markovitch as a means of improving text categorization [2] and has been used by this pair of researchers to compute what they refer to as "semantic relatedness" by means of cosine similarity between the aforementioned vectors, collectively interpreted as a space of "concepts explicitly defined ...

  7. Distributional semantics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributional_semantics

    Distributional semantic models have been applied successfully to the following tasks: finding semantic similarity between words and multi-word expressions; word clustering based on semantic similarity; automatic creation of thesauri and bilingual dictionaries; word sense disambiguation; expanding search requests using synonyms and associations;

  8. Similarity search - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Similarity_search

    Similarity search is the most general term used for a range of mechanisms which share the principle of searching (typically very large) spaces of objects where the only available comparator is the similarity between any pair of objects. This is becoming increasingly important in an age of large information repositories where the objects ...

  9. Content similarity detection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Content_similarity_detection

    More recent approaches to assess content similarity using neural networks have achieved significantly greater accuracy, but come at great computational cost. [36] Traditional neural network approaches embed both pieces of content into semantic vector embeddings to calculate their similarity, which is often their cosine similarity.