Abstract

Natural Language Processing (NLP) systems enable machines to understand, interpret, and generate human-like language, bridging the gap between human communication and computer understanding. Natural Language Interface to Databases (NLIDB) and Natural Language Interface to Visualization (NLIV) systems are designed to enable non-technical users to retrieve and visualize data through natural language queries. However, these systems often face challenges in handling complex correlation and analytical questions, limiting their effectiveness for comprehensive data analysis. Additionally, current Business Intelligence (BI) tools also struggle with understanding the context and semantics of complex questions, further hindering their usability for strategic decision-making. Also, when building these models for generating the queries from natural language, the system handles only the semantic parsing issues as each column header is being changed manually to their normal names by all existing models which is time-consuming, tedious, and subjective.Recent studies reflect the need for attention to context, semantics, and especially ambiguities in dealing with natural language questions. To address this problem, the proposed architecture focuses on understanding the context, correlation-based semantic analysis, and removal of ambiguities using a novel approach. An Enhanced Longest Common Subsequence (ELCS) is suggested where existing LCS is modified with a memorization component for mapping the natural language question tokens with ambiguous table column headers. This can speed up the overall process as human intervention is not required to manually change the column headers. The same is evidenced by carrying out thorough experimentation and comparative study in terms of precision, recall, and F1 score. By synthesizing the latest advancements and addressing challenges, this paper has proved how NLP can significantly enhance the accuracy and efficiency of information retrieval and visualization, broadening the inclusivity and usability of NLIDB, NLIV, and BI systems.

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