Annotating High Level Structures of Short Stories and Personal Anecdotes

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Author(s)
Li, Boyang
Cardier, Beth
Wang, Tong
Metze, Florian
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2018
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Miyazaki, Japan

Abstract

Stories are a vital form of communication in human culture; they are employed daily to persuade, to elicit sympathy, or to convey a message. Computational understanding of human narratives, especially high-level narrative structures, remain limited to date. Multiple literary theories for narrative structures exist, but operationalization of the theories has remained a challenge. We developed an annotation scheme by consolidating and extending existing narratological theories, including Labov and Waletsky’s (1967) functional categorization scheme and Freytag’s (1863) pyramid of dramatic tension, and present 360 annotated short stories collected from online sources. In the future, this research will support an approach that enables systems to intelligently sustain complex communications with humans.

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The 11th Language Resources and Evaluation Conference

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© The European Language Resources Association 2018. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, which permits unrestricted, non-commercial use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, providing that the work is properly cited.

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Creative writing (incl. scriptwriting)

Knowledge representation and reasoning

Human-centred computing

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Li, B; Cardier, B; Wang, T; Metze, F, Annotating High Level Structures of Short Stories and Personal Anecdotes, The 11th Language Resources and Evaluation Conference, 2021, pp. 3290-3296