Abstract

A pun is always humorous and has strong interactive value in people's daily communication. It creates a humorous effect in a certain context, in which a word implies two or more meanings by using polysemy (homographic pun) or phonological similarity to another word (heterographic pun). Pun location is a task to identify the pun word in a given text, which is of great significance to understand humorous texts. Existing methods generally adopt single long sequence structure but cannot well capture the rich semantics of pun words in sentences. We present an approach that considers long-distance and short-distance semantic relations between words simultaneously. For the long-distance semantic relation, we introduce multi-level embeddings to represent the most relevant aspects of the data. For the short-distance semantic relation, we exploit the complex-valued model with a self-adaptive selection mechanism based on multi-scale of input information. Meanwhile, we propose a new classification task to distinguish the homographic pun and heterographic pun. We introduce it as an auxiliary to jointly train the original pun location task, which first learns the location of different types of puns together. Experiment results show that the latest state-of-the-art results can be achieved through our model.

Highlights

  • There is a kind of language structure known as the pun in natural language texts, which is a common rhetorical method that the author intends to make a certain word simultaneously having two or more different meanings

  • METHOD we present the proposed compositional semantics network with multi-task learning (CSN-ML)

  • 1) LONG DISTANCE SEMANTIC RELATION In order to capture the semantic relation between the pun word and the earlier word, we introduce embeddings of different levels according to the characteristics of both homographic and heterographic puns to represent the most relevant aspects of the data

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Summary

Introduction

There is a kind of language structure known as the pun in natural language texts, which is a common rhetorical method that the author intends to make a certain word simultaneously having two or more different meanings. Puns are always humorous and have strong interactive value in people’s daily communication. A pun is often used as a means of humor in an advertisement to give listeners an enjoyable experience [1]. The study of puns is a significant research subject with a wide range of practical applications. Our work focuses on these two types of puns. Puns that have two distinct meanings but share the same pronunciation and spelling are homographic puns. For instance:‘‘I’d like to tell you a chemistry joke but I’m afraid of your reaction.’’

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