Unweaving The Lexical Rainbow: Grounding Linguistic Creativity in Perceptual Semantics

Aus de_evolutionary_art_org
Wechseln zu: Navigation, Suche

Reference

Tony Veale and Khalid Alnajjar: Unweaving The Lexical Rainbow: Grounding Linguistic Creativity in Perceptual Semantics. In: Computational Creativity 2015 ICCC 2015, 63-70.

DOI

Abstract

The challenge of linguistic creativity is to use words in a way that is novel and striking and even whimsical, to convey meanings that remain stubbornly grounded in the very same world of familiar experiences as serves to anchor the most literal and unimaginative language. The challenge remains unmet by systems that merely shuttle or arrange words to achieve novel arrangements without concern as to how those arrangements are to spur the processes of meaning construction in a reader. In this paper we explore a problem of lexical invention that cannot be solved without an explicit model of the perceptual grounding of language: the invention of apt new names for colours. To solve this problem we shall call upon the notion of a linguistic readymade, a phrase that is wrenched from its original context of use to be given new meaning and new resonance in new settings. To ensure that our linguistic readymades, which owe a great deal to Marcel Duchamp’s notion of found art, are anchored in a consensus model of perception, we introduce the notion of a lexicalized colour stereotype.

Extended Abstract

Bibtex

@inproceedings{
 author = {Veale, Tony and Alnajjar, Khalid},
 title = {Unweaving The Lexical Rainbow: Grounding Linguistic Creativity in Perceptual Semantics},
 booktitle = {Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Computational Creativity},
 series = {ICCC2015},
 year = {2015},
 month = {Jun},
 location = {Park City, Utah, USA},
 pages = {63-70},
 url = {http://computationalcreativity.net/iccc2015/proceedings/3_3Veale.pdf http://de.evo-art.org/index.php?title=Unweaving_The_Lexical_Rainbow:_Grounding_Linguistic_Creativity_in_Perceptual_Semantics },
 publisher = {International Association for Computational Creativity},
 keywords = {computational, creativity},
}

Used References

Thorsten Brants and Alex Franz. (2006). Web 1T 5-gram database, Version 1. Linguistic Data Consortium.

Kim Binsted and Graeme Ritchie. (1997). Computational Rules for Generating Punning Riddles. HUMOR, the International Journal of Humor Research, 10(1):25-76.

Christian F. Hempelmann. (2008). Computational Humor: Beyond the pun. In Victor Raskin (ed.), The Primer of Humor Research. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.

Rachel Giora, Ofer Fein, Jonathan Ganzi, Natalie Alkeslassy Levi, Hadas Sabah. (2004). Weapons of Mass Distraction: Optimal Innovation and Pleasure Ratings. Metaphor and Symbol 19(2):115-141,

Richard S. Hunter (1948). Photoelectric Color-Difference Meter. Journal of the Optimal Society of America 38 (7): 661.

Simon Jennings (2003). Artist's Color Manual: The Complete Guide to Working With Color. Chronicle Books.

Kevin L. Keller. (2003). Strategic brand management: building, measuring and managing brand equity. Prentice Hall.

Gozde Özbal and Carlo Strapparava. (2012). A computational approach to automatize creative naming. In Proceedings of the 50th annual meeting of the Association of Computational Linguistics (ACL-2012), Jeju Island, Korea.

Stephen Pentak. (2010). Analogous Color Scheme. Design Basics (8th edition.). Australia: Cengage.

Gaurav Sharma. (2003). Digital Color Imaging Handbook (1.7.2 edition). CRC Press.

Michael R. Smith, Ryan S. Hintze and Dan Ventura. (2014). Nehovah: A Neologism Creator Nomen Ipsum. Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Computational Creativity, Ljubljana, Slovenia.

Tony Veale. (2006). Tracking the Lexical Zeitgeist with Wikipedia and WordNet. In Proceedings of ECAI’2006, the 17th European Conference on Artificial Intelligence, Trento, Italy.

Tony Veale and Cristine Butnariu. (2006). Exploring Linguistic Creativity via Predictive Lexicology. At the ECAI’2006 Joint International Workshop on Computational Creativity. Italy.

Tony Veale. (2011). Creative Language Retrieval: A Robust Hybrid of Information Retrieval and Linguistic Creativity. In Proceedings of ACL’2011, the 49th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies. Portland, Oregon.

Tony Veale. (2012). Exploding the Creativity Myth: The Computational Foundations of Linguistic Creativity. London: Bloomsbury Academic. Tony Veale. (2013). Linguistic


Links

Full Text

http://computationalcreativity.net/iccc2015/proceedings/3_3Veale.pdf

intern file

Sonstige Links