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Again, consider the same simple corpus of sentences: "Maurice likes dolphins"; "Maurice likes plants"; "Maurice befriend

Posted: Fri Jun 10, 2022 10:19 am
by correctanswer
Again Consider The Same Simple Corpus Of Sentences Maurice Likes Dolphins Maurice Likes Plants Maurice Befriend 1
Again Consider The Same Simple Corpus Of Sentences Maurice Likes Dolphins Maurice Likes Plants Maurice Befriend 1 (32.43 KiB) Viewed 432 times
Again Consider The Same Simple Corpus Of Sentences Maurice Likes Dolphins Maurice Likes Plants Maurice Befriend 2
Again Consider The Same Simple Corpus Of Sentences Maurice Likes Dolphins Maurice Likes Plants Maurice Befriend 2 (23.67 KiB) Viewed 432 times
Again, consider the same simple corpus of sentences: "Maurice likes dolphins"; "Maurice likes plants"; "Maurice befriends dolphins"; "Maurice befriends plants"; "Maurice fears sharks"; and "Maurice hates sharks". If we represented each word as a count vector reflecting how many times it co-occurs with all the other words (i.e., in the same sentence), which of the following pairs of words would have the most similar vectors? "Sharks" and "hates" "Hates" and "likes" "Plants" and "dolphins" "Sharks" and "Maurice" "Plants" and "sharks"
Consider the very simple corpus of sentences: "Maurice likes dolphins"; "Maurice likes plants"; "Maurice befriends dolphins"; "Maurice befriends plants"; "Maurice fears sharks"; and "Maurice hates sharks". Which words does "dolphin" co-occur with (excluding "dolphin" itself)? "Maurice", "likes", and "befriends" "Maurice", "likes", and "plants" "Maurice", "fears", and "plants" "Maurice", "sharks", and "hates"