natural language logic in stanford corenlp











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How does one use the natural logic component of Stanford CoreNLP?



I am using CoreNLP 3.9.1 and I fed natlog as an annotator in command line, but I don't seem to see any natlog result in the output, i.e. OperatorAnnotation and PolarityAnnotation, according to this link. Does that have anything to do with the outputFormat? I've tried xml and json, but neither has any output on natural logic. The other stuff (tokenization, dep parse) is in there though.



Here is my command:



./corenlp.sh -annotators tokenize,ssplit,pos,lemma,depparse,natlog -file natlog.test -outputFormat xml


Thanks in advance.










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  • My test sentence looks like: 'no student walks'. So I was expecting downward polarity somewhere in the output.
    – Hai
    Nov 7 at 21:38















up vote
0
down vote

favorite












How does one use the natural logic component of Stanford CoreNLP?



I am using CoreNLP 3.9.1 and I fed natlog as an annotator in command line, but I don't seem to see any natlog result in the output, i.e. OperatorAnnotation and PolarityAnnotation, according to this link. Does that have anything to do with the outputFormat? I've tried xml and json, but neither has any output on natural logic. The other stuff (tokenization, dep parse) is in there though.



Here is my command:



./corenlp.sh -annotators tokenize,ssplit,pos,lemma,depparse,natlog -file natlog.test -outputFormat xml


Thanks in advance.










share|improve this question






















  • My test sentence looks like: 'no student walks'. So I was expecting downward polarity somewhere in the output.
    – Hai
    Nov 7 at 21:38













up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











How does one use the natural logic component of Stanford CoreNLP?



I am using CoreNLP 3.9.1 and I fed natlog as an annotator in command line, but I don't seem to see any natlog result in the output, i.e. OperatorAnnotation and PolarityAnnotation, according to this link. Does that have anything to do with the outputFormat? I've tried xml and json, but neither has any output on natural logic. The other stuff (tokenization, dep parse) is in there though.



Here is my command:



./corenlp.sh -annotators tokenize,ssplit,pos,lemma,depparse,natlog -file natlog.test -outputFormat xml


Thanks in advance.










share|improve this question













How does one use the natural logic component of Stanford CoreNLP?



I am using CoreNLP 3.9.1 and I fed natlog as an annotator in command line, but I don't seem to see any natlog result in the output, i.e. OperatorAnnotation and PolarityAnnotation, according to this link. Does that have anything to do with the outputFormat? I've tried xml and json, but neither has any output on natural logic. The other stuff (tokenization, dep parse) is in there though.



Here is my command:



./corenlp.sh -annotators tokenize,ssplit,pos,lemma,depparse,natlog -file natlog.test -outputFormat xml


Thanks in advance.







stanford-nlp






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asked Nov 7 at 21:37









Hai

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  • My test sentence looks like: 'no student walks'. So I was expecting downward polarity somewhere in the output.
    – Hai
    Nov 7 at 21:38


















  • My test sentence looks like: 'no student walks'. So I was expecting downward polarity somewhere in the output.
    – Hai
    Nov 7 at 21:38
















My test sentence looks like: 'no student walks'. So I was expecting downward polarity somewhere in the output.
– Hai
Nov 7 at 21:38




My test sentence looks like: 'no student walks'. So I was expecting downward polarity somewhere in the output.
– Hai
Nov 7 at 21:38












1 Answer
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I don't think any of the output options show the natlog stuff. This is more designed if you have a Java system and are working with the Annotations themselves in Java code. You should be able to see them by looking at the CoreLabel for each token.






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  • Thanks a lot! I will try it out in java.
    – Hai
    Nov 8 at 1:56











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1 Answer
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active

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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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active

oldest

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active

oldest

votes








up vote
0
down vote



accepted










I don't think any of the output options show the natlog stuff. This is more designed if you have a Java system and are working with the Annotations themselves in Java code. You should be able to see them by looking at the CoreLabel for each token.






share|improve this answer





















  • Thanks a lot! I will try it out in java.
    – Hai
    Nov 8 at 1:56















up vote
0
down vote



accepted










I don't think any of the output options show the natlog stuff. This is more designed if you have a Java system and are working with the Annotations themselves in Java code. You should be able to see them by looking at the CoreLabel for each token.






share|improve this answer





















  • Thanks a lot! I will try it out in java.
    – Hai
    Nov 8 at 1:56













up vote
0
down vote



accepted







up vote
0
down vote



accepted






I don't think any of the output options show the natlog stuff. This is more designed if you have a Java system and are working with the Annotations themselves in Java code. You should be able to see them by looking at the CoreLabel for each token.






share|improve this answer












I don't think any of the output options show the natlog stuff. This is more designed if you have a Java system and are working with the Annotations themselves in Java code. You should be able to see them by looking at the CoreLabel for each token.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



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answered Nov 7 at 23:11









StanfordNLPHelp

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  • Thanks a lot! I will try it out in java.
    – Hai
    Nov 8 at 1:56


















  • Thanks a lot! I will try it out in java.
    – Hai
    Nov 8 at 1:56
















Thanks a lot! I will try it out in java.
– Hai
Nov 8 at 1:56




Thanks a lot! I will try it out in java.
– Hai
Nov 8 at 1:56


















 

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