Language resource management — Semantic annotation framework — Part 9: Reference annotation framework (RAF)

This document provides a comprehensive model for the annotation and representation of referential phenomena in natural language texts and multimodal interactions. Such phenomena can cover simple anaphoric or coreferential mechanisms as well as more complex bridging or multimodal mechanisms. It provides a reference serialisation in XML defined as a customisation of the TEI P5 guidelines. In addition, the document describes the core data categories related to referential entities and link structures, and also needed for the description of annotation schemes and serialisation mechanisms for implementing conformant models as concrete data formats.

Gestion des ressources linguistiques — Cadre d'annotation sémantique — Partie 9: Cadre d'annotation de la référence (RAF)

Upravljanje jezikovnih virov - Ogrodje za semantično označevanje - 9. del: Referenčni okvir označevanja (RAF)

General Information

Status
Published
Publication Date
15-Dec-2019
Current Stage
6060 - International Standard published
Start Date
16-Dec-2019
Due Date
12-Oct-2019
Completion Date
16-Dec-2019

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SLOVENSKI STANDARD
SIST ISO 24617-9:2021
01-marec-2021
Upravljanje jezikovnih virov - Ogrodje za semantično označevanje - 9. del:
Referenčni okvir označevanja (RAF)
Language resource management -- Semantic annotation framework -- Part 9: Reference
annotation framework (RAF)
Gestion des ressources linguistiques -- Cadre d'annotation sémantique -- Partie 9:
Référence (ISOref)
Ta slovenski standard je istoveten z: ISO 24617-9:2019
ICS:
01.020 Terminologija (načela in Terminology (principles and
koordinacija) coordination)
01.140.20 Informacijske vede Information sciences
35.240.30 Uporabniške rešitve IT v IT applications in information,
informatiki, dokumentiranju in documentation and
založništvu publishing
SIST ISO 24617-9:2021 en
2003-01.Slovenski inštitut za standardizacijo. Razmnoževanje celote ali delov tega standarda ni dovoljeno.

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SIST ISO 24617-9:2021

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SIST ISO 24617-9:2021
INTERNATIONAL ISO
STANDARD 24617-9
First edition
2019-12
Language resource management —
Semantic annotation framework —
Part 9:
Reference annotation framework
(RAF)
Reference number
ISO 24617-9:2019(E)
©
ISO 2019

---------------------- Page: 3 ----------------------
SIST ISO 24617-9:2021
ISO 24617-9:2019(E)

COPYRIGHT PROTECTED DOCUMENT
© ISO 2019
All rights reserved. Unless otherwise specified, or required in the context of its implementation, no part of this publication may
be reproduced or utilized otherwise in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, or posting
on the internet or an intranet, without prior written permission. Permission can be requested from either ISO at the address
below or ISO’s member body in the country of the requester.
ISO copyright office
CP 401 • Ch. de Blandonnet 8
CH-1214 Vernier, Geneva
Phone: +41 22 749 01 11
Fax: +41 22 749 09 47
Email: copyright@iso.org
Website: www.iso.org
Published in Switzerland
ii © ISO 2019 – All rights reserved

---------------------- Page: 4 ----------------------
SIST ISO 24617-9:2021
ISO 24617-9:2019(E)

Contents Page
Foreword .iv
Introduction .v
1 Scope . 1
2 Normative references . 1
3 Terms and definitions . 1
4 Basic principles . 2
5 Meta-model for reference annotation . 3
5.1 Overview . 3
5.2 Referring expressions . 3
5.3 Data categories for referring expressions . 4
5.4 Lexical relations . 5
5.5 Discourse entities . 5
5.6 Objectal relations . 5
5.7 Metadata . 5
6 Abstract syntax, concrete syntax, and semantics of annotations . 6
6.1 Introduction . 6
6.2 Abstract syntax . 6
6.2.1 Conceptual inventory . 6
6.2.2 Annotation structures: Entity structures and link structures . 7
6.3 Semantics . 8
6.3.1 Discourse entity structures and objectal relation links . 8
6.3.2 Referential expression entity structures and lexical relation links. 9
6.4 Implementing an XML serialisation compliant with the TEI P5 guidelines .10
6.4.1 Introduction .10
6.4.2 Namespace .10
6.4.3 Generic principles attached to a TEI compliant serialisation .10
6.4.4 Feature structures .11
6.4.5 General document architecture .12
6.5 Implementation of the Referring expression component .12
6.6 Implementation of the Discourse entity component .13
6.7 Implementation of referential relations.13
6.8 Objectal relations: grouping .14
6.9 Alternative linking: ambiguity .15
6.10 Multiple links .15
6.11 Representing referential chains .16
6.12 Bridging phenomena .16
Annex A (normative) Data categories for reference annotation .18
Annex B (informative) Complementary examples or partial examples referred to in the
main text of the document .25
Bibliography .26
© ISO 2019 – All rights reserved iii

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Foreword
ISO (the International Organization for Standardization) is a worldwide federation of national standards
bodies (ISO member bodies). The work of preparing International Standards is normally carried out
through ISO technical committees. Each member body interested in a subject for which a technical
committee has been established has the right to be represented on that committee. International
organizations, governmental and non-governmental, in liaison with ISO, also take part in the work.
ISO collaborates closely with the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) on all matters of
electrotechnical standardization.
The procedures used to develop this document and those intended for its further maintenance are
described in the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 1. In particular the different approval criteria needed for the
different types of ISO documents should be noted. This document was drafted in accordance with the
editorial rules of the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 2. www .iso .org/ directives
Attention is drawn to the possibility that some of the elements of this document may be the subject of
patent rights. ISO shall not be held responsible for identifying any or all such patent rights. Details of
any patent rights identified during the development of the document will be in the Introduction and/or
on the ISO list of patent declarations received. www .iso .org/ patents
Any trade name used in this document is information given for the convenience of users and does not
constitute an endorsement.
For an explanation of the voluntary nature of standards, the meaning of ISO specific terms and
expressions related to conformity assessment, as well as information about ISO's adherence to the
World Trade Organization (WTO) principles in the Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT), see www .iso .org/
iso/ foreword .html.
This document was prepared by Technical Committee ISO/TC 37, Terminology and other language and
content resources, Subcommittee SC 4, Language resource management.
A list of all parts in the ISO 24617 series can be found on the ISO website.
Any feedback or questions on this document should be directed to the user’s national standards body. A
complete listing of these bodies can be found at www .iso .org/ members .html.
iv © ISO 2019 – All rights reserved

---------------------- Page: 6 ----------------------
SIST ISO 24617-9:2021
ISO 24617-9:2019(E)

Introduction
This document is intended to complement the ISO 24617 series and to provide all the necessary
conceptual and technical mechanisms for the annotation of referential phenomena in multimodal
discourse. Reference phenomena are an essential component for the understanding and structuring of
discursive mechanisms, ranging from very basic pronominal relation to complex bridging anaphora.
Annotating such phenomena in an interoperable way improves the re-usability of language resources
in such applications in language technology as named entity recognition, text understanding and
synthesis, text summarization, information retrieval, automatic question-answering, man-machine
dialogue, and machine translation.
The content of this document builds upon various projects and software platforms that have been
dealing with reference annotation (RA), in particular the following References [9],[2],[16],[21],
[26],[25],[22],[5],[15],[13] but also the TEI P5 guidelines. Based on these and other previous works,
the Referential Annotation Framework (RAF) aims at providing a synthesized way of treating various
reference phenomena in discourse. In continuity with most practices in the field, RAF focuses on
marking up referring expressions in a discourse and the relations that hold between them and the
corresponding entities, whether this is based upon employing crowd sourcing or machine learning
strategies.
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SIST ISO 24617-9:2021
INTERNATIONAL STANDARD ISO 24617-9:2019(E)
Language resource management — Semantic annotation
framework —
Part 9:
Reference annotation framework (RAF)
1 Scope
This document provides a comprehensive model for the annotation and representation of referential
phenomena in natural language texts and multimodal interactions. Such phenomena can cover simple
anaphoric or coreferential mechanisms as well as more complex bridging or multimodal mechanisms. It
provides a reference serialisation in XML defined as a customisation of the TEI P5 guidelines. In addition,
the document describes the core data categories related to referential entities and link structures, and
also needed for the description of annotation schemes and serialisation mechanisms for implementing
conformant models as concrete data formats.
2 Normative references
The following documents are referred to in the text in such a way that some or all of their content
constitutes requirements of this document. For dated references, only the edition cited applies. For
undated references, the latest edition of the referenced document (including any amendments) applies.
ISO 24622-1, Language resource management — Component Metadata Infrastructure (CMDI) — Part 1:
The Component Metadata Model
TEI P5, Guidelines for Electronic Text Encoding and Interchange. Version 3.5.0. Last updated on 29th
January 2019. TEI Consortium. http:// www .tei -c .org/ Guidelines/ P5/
Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Fifth Edition), W3C Recommendation 26 November 2008.
https:// www .w3 .org/ TR/ REC -xml/
IETF BCP 47, Tags for Identifying Languages, September 2009. https:// tools .ietf .org/ html/ bcp47
3 Terms and definitions
For the purposes of this document, the following terms and definitions apply.
ISO and IEC maintain terminological databases for use in standardization at the following addresses:
— ISO Online browsing platform: available at https:// www .iso .org/ obp
— IEC Electropedia: available at http:// www .electropedia .org/
3.1
anaphora
linguistic mechanism by which the interpretation of a referring expression (3.7) depends on another
expression mentioned in the same text or discourse
Note 1 to entry: The notion of anaphora is more general than that of coreference (3.3): the interpretation of
anaphora is context-dependent, whereas coreference is determined rather rigidly independently to its possible
use of context (see Reference [25]).
© ISO 2019 – All rights reserved 1

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Note 2 to entry: The term is used in this document in its general sense since, for instance, no specific distinction
is made here with the notion of cataphora (i.e. coreference) with a more specific expression occurring later in a
discourse).
3.2
communicative segment
elementary portion of a multimodal interaction
3.3
coreference
identity of referents (3.6) of two referring expressions
Note 1 to entry: The concept covered here corresponds to the data category objectal identity, described in
Annex A.
3.4
objectal relation
relation between two discourse entities (3.6) reflecting their intended association from a referential
point of view
Note 1 to entry: The referential association may identify that they are identical, disjoint, or overlapping, or that
one includes the other (see References [6] and [25]).
3.5
reference
relation between a referring expression and a discourse entity (3.6) denoted by it
Note 1 to entry: The verb "to refer to" expresses such a relation: if there is a reference relation between an
expression x and a discourse entity e, then x is said to refer to e.
3.6
referent
discourse entity
extra-linguistic entity which is denoted, or pointed out, by a communicative segment (3.2)
Note 1 to entry: discourse entity is used preferably in the context of the description of the concrete syntax
whereas referent is used in the abstract syntax, but also when the underlying process is implied by the expression.
3.7
referring expression
communicative segment (3.2) that specifically designates an entity or an event, whether concrete or
abstract, discourse new or old, real or fictional
4 Basic principles
This document provides a generic framework for the annotation of reference phenomena in discourse,
whether in textual, spoken or multimodal form. As required by ISO 24612 and ISO 24617-6 principles, its
syntax is formulated at two levels, abstract and concrete. The abstract syntax characterizes in abstract
terms what RAF theoretically is. There can be a variety of concrete syntaxes that conform to a proposed
abstract syntax. XML-serialization is the most commonly accepted concrete syntax among them.
The proposed serialisation is entirely conceived as a customisation of the TEI P5 guidelines and
builds upon the existing constructs provided by ISO 24611 for morpho-syntactic annotation. Any
implementation of the present document shall also be compliant with the TEI P5 guidelines and
consequently the XML W3C recommendation.
As suggested by [25], this document focuses on the annotation of referring expressions such as noun
phrases in a language as its markable expressions, abbreviated as "markables". This includes entities
(John, the dog) as well as events, as expressed through noun phrases (the party, the meeting). Verbal
expressions denoting events may be marked as well, however, since they also may refer to events. For
example, “We met, and it lasted all morning.” It leaves out annotation of non-referring noun phrases and
2 © ISO 2019 – All rights reserved

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bound anaphora involving quantification to some extent. It does not address such tasks as annotation
of the relation between a subject and a predicative noun phrase (e.g., "John is a singer and guitar
player"). Nor does it treat type coreference. This includes so-called sloppy identities (e.g., "John loves
his wife and so does Bill") and verb-phrase anaphors (e.g., "Animals suffer as much as we do", “Peter
cuts vegetables much faster than I do (cut vegetables)”) in general. In delimiting its markables, RAF
attempts to make clear the theory of reference as much as possible without getting into theoretical
details and also the notion of coreference against a more general notion of anaphora.
5 Meta-model for reference annotation
5.1 Overview
The general meta-model for reference annotation is presented in Figure 1. It articulates the identification
and qualification on two complementary levels:
— the linguistic level where referring expressions can be segmented and qualified within the flow of a
discourse;
— the discourse domain where discourse entities referred to by referring expression are identified as
relevant for modelling the discourse domain.
Both objects may be further refined by data categories and links among them as described further on
in this document.
Referring expressions are also anchored on communicative segments, which may be linguistic segments
as well as any multimodal communicative sign (gesture, face movement, etc.) that is relevant for the
identification of the referring act.
Figure 1 — Meta model for reference annotation
5.2 Referring expressions
The referring expression component corresponds to the identification of one or several communicative
segments in the textual source as well as within other multimodal channels (visual or auditory) that
can be interpreted as a single referring act. A referring expression may for instance correspond to a
single continuous linguistic segment.
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EXAMPLE 1 [en] I ate [the apple] .
i
where the referring expression i is a single definite description.
It can also be the combination of simpler referring expressions as is the case within a coordination.
EXAMPLE 2 [en] I ate [[an apple] and [an orange] ] ,
i j k
where the referring expressions i and j are part of the larger referring expression k.
It can also be expressed by one or several sub-token markers, as is the case in agglutinative languages
or when referring morphemes are bound within another token.
EXAMPLE 3 [it] prendo[lo] (I take it.).
i
Depending on the serialisation, referring expressions can be represented as explicitly recursive, by
means of links among them, or implicitly recursive, by systematically pointing to their occurrences in
the source text.
Markables for reference annotation, however, include complex anaphors, zero pronouns, and discourse
deixis. Plural pronouns such as "they" may have partial antecedents, as illustrated by Example 4 below,
while zero pronouns often occur in conversations in some languages other than English, as illustrated
by a Korean example below in Example 5. Discourse deixis such as "this" and "that" refer to part of what
has been said in discourse. Spatial and temporal deixis such as "here", "there", "now", and "then" are
also to be marked up as referring expressions.
EXAMPLE 4 [en] John married Lisa yesterday and they went to Paris for their honeymoon.
i j {i,j} {i,j}
EXAMPLE 5 Dialogue in Korean [ko]: "Mia wass-ni?" (Did Mia come?)
"Yey, wass-e-yo". (Yes, [pro] came.)
NOTE The subject in the answer is implied and represented in the translation as a zero pronoun [pro].
EXAMPLE 6 [en] I don't believe that this story of his is true.
Markables are not restricted to referring expressions of nominal and pronominal forms. They may also
cover verbal (anaphoric) forms such as "so do(es)" or "do", as in the following examples.
EXAMPLE 7 [en] Mary loves her husband and so does Jane.
EXAMPLE 8 [en] Animals suffer as much as we do.
5.3 Data categories for referring expressions
Referring expressions may be characterised by a variety of data categories that are felt to be relevant
for the annotation project at hand. These categories may percolate from lower annotation levels (e.g.
morpho-syntactic, syntactic or semantic) or specifically relate to the occurrence context of the referring
expression. The following data categories may be considered as the basis for the characterisation of
referring expressions. When the corresponding data category is not defined in another ISO standard,
the definitions provided in Annex A shall be adopted.
— Morpho-syntactic categories relevant for referring expressions resulting from the percolation
of one or several properties of the components of the referring expression: grammatical gender
(grammaticalGender, ISO 24611), grammatical number (grammaticalNumber, ISO 24611), person
(person, ISO 24611).
— Syntactic or semantic data categories resulting from the identification and qualification of the
1)
referring expression as a syntactic constituent: syntactic category (syntacticCategory, ISO 24615-1 ),
1) With typical values such as nounPhrase and verbPhrase (ISO 24615-1).
4 © ISO 2019 – All rights reserved

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grammatical case (grammaticalCase, ISO 24611), grammatical function (grammaticalFunction,
ISO 24615-1).
— Semantic-pragmatic data categories: referential status, definiteness (definiteness, ISO 24611),
animacy.
EXAMPLE 9 [en] Lee loves [her husband] , but he doesn't care.
feminine,i feminine,i masculine j, masculine,j
5.4 Lexical relations
Lexical relations can be associated with data categories expressing lexical semantic relations that
usually form the basis of the referential interpretation process. These data categories define relations
between lexical items or, by inheritance from their nominal heads, nominal phrases. For reference
annotation, the relations that are defined between lexical items can be extended to larger linguistic
units, such as noun phrases. The data categories provided in Annex A cover the most commonly needed
cases: synonymy, hyponymy, hypernymy, compatibility, meronymy, and lexical identity.
EXAMPLE 10 [en] John bought a pear_i and Jane an apple_j, for they love these fruits_{i,j}. [hyponymy, together
with a subset relation at discourse entity level].
5.5 Discourse entities
The data categories associated with discourse entities concern properties of extra-linguistic entities
involved in the interpretation of referring expressions. These properties are marked grammatically in
some languages, for example animacy and alienability. The core properties elicited in this document are
the following ones:
— abstractness: A complex data category which can take two values: abstract and concrete;
— alienability: A complex data category which can take two values: alienable and inalienable;
— animacy: A complex data category which can take two values: animate and inanimate;
— cardinality: the provision of the number of entities within a discourse entity interpreted as a set.
— entity categorisation: A complex data category that allows the linking of a discourse entity to an
underlying classification or ontology
— natural gender: the provision of the natural gender for a discourse entity seen as a living entity;
precise definitions and sources are available in Annex A.
5.6 Objectal relations
Objectal relations are relations between discourse entities seen as extra-linguistic concepts. The
[25],[23],[24]
following relations form the basis of the present standard in this respect:
— objectal identity, to express an exact coreference relation;
— part of, when a discourse entity is identified as being a component of another one;
— member of, when a discourse entity is identified as an element within a set of referents;
— subset, when a discourse entity is seen as a set of entities all part of a larger set.
Precise definitions and sources are available in Annex A.
5.7 Metadata
The metadata for reference annotation documents contains global information concerning annotator(s),
tool, date, and pointer to scheme specification such as DCS (Data Category Selection). It can also
© ISO 2019 – All rights reserved 5

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include local information concerning inter-annotator agreement, confidence level with respect to tools,
revisions, and updates.
For the specification of such metadata, implementation shall comply to the TEI P5 guidelines or
ISO 24622-1. It may also comply to the OLAC (Open Language Archive Community) initiative.
6 Abstract syntax, concrete syntax, and semantics of annotations
6.1 Introduction
In this document, referential annotations are defined in accordance with the principles of semantic
annotation laid down in ISO 24617-6. Accordingly, annotations have a three-part definition consisting
of an abstract syntax, a concrete syntax, and a semantics. The abstract syntax defines annotations in
the sense of the Linguistic Annotation Framework (ISO 24612), namely as a specification of linguistic
information that is added to segments of source data, independent of the format in which the information
is represented. For semantic annotation, such specifications are pairs, triples and in general n-tuples of
semantic concepts. ISO 24612 defines representations, by contrast, as the rendering of annotations in
a particular format. A concrete syntax specifies a representation format for the annotation structures
defined by the corresponding abstract syntax. Finally, a semantics is defined for the annotations defined
by the abstract syntax, allowing alternative representation formats to share the same semantics.
The present clause specifies first the abstract syntax of reference annotations, subsequently their
semantics, and finally a concrete syntax for representing annotations as a customisation of the TEI P5
guidelines. The TEI P5 guidelines provide a generic XML vocabulary for the representation of textual
content and associated annotations. In representing various relevant features of referring expressions,
discourse entities and the relations between them, this document follows ISO 24610-1, as required by
ISO 24612.
6.2 Abstract syntax
The structures defined by an abstract syntax are n-tuples consisting of basic concepts, taken from a
store of such concepts called the ‘conceptua
...

SLOVENSKI STANDARD
SIST ISO 24617-9:2021
01-marec-2021
Upravljanje jezikovnih virov - Ogrodje za semantično označevanje - 9. del:
Referenčni okvir označevanja (RAF)
Language resource management -- Semantic annotation framework -- Part 9: Reference
annotation framework (RAF)
Gestion des ressources linguistiques -- Cadre d'annotation sémantique -- Partie 9:
Référence (ISOref)
Ta slovenski standard je istoveten z: ISO 24617-9:2019
ICS:
01.020 Terminologija (načela in Terminology (principles and
koordinacija) coordination)
35.240.30 Uporabniške rešitve IT v IT applications in information,
informatiki, dokumentiranju in documentation and
založništvu publishing
SIST ISO 24617-9:2021 en
2003-01.Slovenski inštitut za standardizacijo. Razmnoževanje celote ali delov tega standarda ni dovoljeno.

---------------------- Page: 1 ----------------------
SIST ISO 24617-9:2021

---------------------- Page: 2 ----------------------
SIST ISO 24617-9:2021
INTERNATIONAL ISO
STANDARD 24617-9
First edition
2019-12
Language resource management —
Semantic annotation framework —
Part 9:
Reference annotation framework
(RAF)
Reference number
ISO 24617-9:2019(E)
©
ISO 2019

---------------------- Page: 3 ----------------------
SIST ISO 24617-9:2021
ISO 24617-9:2019(E)

COPYRIGHT PROTECTED DOCUMENT
© ISO 2019
All rights reserved. Unless otherwise specified, or required in the context of its implementation, no part of this publication may
be reproduced or utilized otherwise in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, or posting
on the internet or an intranet, without prior written permission. Permission can be requested from either ISO at the address
below or ISO’s member body in the country of the requester.
ISO copyright office
CP 401 • Ch. de Blandonnet 8
CH-1214 Vernier, Geneva
Phone: +41 22 749 01 11
Fax: +41 22 749 09 47
Email: copyright@iso.org
Website: www.iso.org
Published in Switzerland
ii © ISO 2019 – All rights reserved

---------------------- Page: 4 ----------------------
SIST ISO 24617-9:2021
ISO 24617-9:2019(E)

Contents Page
Foreword .iv
Introduction .v
1 Scope . 1
2 Normative references . 1
3 Terms and definitions . 1
4 Basic principles . 2
5 Meta-model for reference annotation . 3
5.1 Overview . 3
5.2 Referring expressions . 3
5.3 Data categories for referring expressions . 4
5.4 Lexical relations . 5
5.5 Discourse entities . 5
5.6 Objectal relations . 5
5.7 Metadata . 5
6 Abstract syntax, concrete syntax, and semantics of annotations . 6
6.1 Introduction . 6
6.2 Abstract syntax . 6
6.2.1 Conceptual inventory . 6
6.2.2 Annotation structures: Entity structures and link structures . 7
6.3 Semantics . 8
6.3.1 Discourse entity structures and objectal relation links . 8
6.3.2 Referential expression entity structures and lexical relation links. 9
6.4 Implementing an XML serialisation compliant with the TEI P5 guidelines .10
6.4.1 Introduction .10
6.4.2 Namespace .10
6.4.3 Generic principles attached to a TEI compliant serialisation .10
6.4.4 Feature structures .11
6.4.5 General document architecture .12
6.5 Implementation of the Referring expression component .12
6.6 Implementation of the Discourse entity component .13
6.7 Implementation of referential relations.13
6.8 Objectal relations: grouping .14
6.9 Alternative linking: ambiguity .15
6.10 Multiple links .15
6.11 Representing referential chains .16
6.12 Bridging phenomena .16
Annex A (normative) Data categories for reference annotation .18
Annex B (informative) Complementary examples or partial examples referred to in the
main text of the document .25
Bibliography .26
© ISO 2019 – All rights reserved iii

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Foreword
ISO (the International Organization for Standardization) is a worldwide federation of national standards
bodies (ISO member bodies). The work of preparing International Standards is normally carried out
through ISO technical committees. Each member body interested in a subject for which a technical
committee has been established has the right to be represented on that committee. International
organizations, governmental and non-governmental, in liaison with ISO, also take part in the work.
ISO collaborates closely with the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) on all matters of
electrotechnical standardization.
The procedures used to develop this document and those intended for its further maintenance are
described in the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 1. In particular the different approval criteria needed for the
different types of ISO documents should be noted. This document was drafted in accordance with the
editorial rules of the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 2. www .iso .org/ directives
Attention is drawn to the possibility that some of the elements of this document may be the subject of
patent rights. ISO shall not be held responsible for identifying any or all such patent rights. Details of
any patent rights identified during the development of the document will be in the Introduction and/or
on the ISO list of patent declarations received. www .iso .org/ patents
Any trade name used in this document is information given for the convenience of users and does not
constitute an endorsement.
For an explanation of the voluntary nature of standards, the meaning of ISO specific terms and
expressions related to conformity assessment, as well as information about ISO's adherence to the
World Trade Organization (WTO) principles in the Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT), see www .iso .org/
iso/ foreword .html.
This document was prepared by Technical Committee ISO/TC 37, Terminology and other language and
content resources, Subcommittee SC 4, Language resource management.
A list of all parts in the ISO 24617 series can be found on the ISO website.
Any feedback or questions on this document should be directed to the user’s national standards body. A
complete listing of these bodies can be found at www .iso .org/ members .html.
iv © ISO 2019 – All rights reserved

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Introduction
This document is intended to complement the ISO 24617 series and to provide all the necessary
conceptual and technical mechanisms for the annotation of referential phenomena in multimodal
discourse. Reference phenomena are an essential component for the understanding and structuring of
discursive mechanisms, ranging from very basic pronominal relation to complex bridging anaphora.
Annotating such phenomena in an interoperable way improves the re-usability of language resources
in such applications in language technology as named entity recognition, text understanding and
synthesis, text summarization, information retrieval, automatic question-answering, man-machine
dialogue, and machine translation.
The content of this document builds upon various projects and software platforms that have been
dealing with reference annotation (RA), in particular the following References [9],[2],[16],[21],
[26],[25],[22],[5],[15],[13] but also the TEI P5 guidelines. Based on these and other previous works,
the Referential Annotation Framework (RAF) aims at providing a synthesized way of treating various
reference phenomena in discourse. In continuity with most practices in the field, RAF focuses on
marking up referring expressions in a discourse and the relations that hold between them and the
corresponding entities, whether this is based upon employing crowd sourcing or machine learning
strategies.
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SIST ISO 24617-9:2021
INTERNATIONAL STANDARD ISO 24617-9:2019(E)
Language resource management — Semantic annotation
framework —
Part 9:
Reference annotation framework (RAF)
1 Scope
This document provides a comprehensive model for the annotation and representation of referential
phenomena in natural language texts and multimodal interactions. Such phenomena can cover simple
anaphoric or coreferential mechanisms as well as more complex bridging or multimodal mechanisms. It
provides a reference serialisation in XML defined as a customisation of the TEI P5 guidelines. In addition,
the document describes the core data categories related to referential entities and link structures, and
also needed for the description of annotation schemes and serialisation mechanisms for implementing
conformant models as concrete data formats.
2 Normative references
The following documents are referred to in the text in such a way that some or all of their content
constitutes requirements of this document. For dated references, only the edition cited applies. For
undated references, the latest edition of the referenced document (including any amendments) applies.
ISO 24622-1, Language resource management — Component Metadata Infrastructure (CMDI) — Part 1:
The Component Metadata Model
TEI P5, Guidelines for Electronic Text Encoding and Interchange. Version 3.5.0. Last updated on 29th
January 2019. TEI Consortium. http:// www .tei -c .org/ Guidelines/ P5/
Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Fifth Edition), W3C Recommendation 26 November 2008.
https:// www .w3 .org/ TR/ REC -xml/
IETF BCP 47, Tags for Identifying Languages, September 2009. https:// tools .ietf .org/ html/ bcp47
3 Terms and definitions
For the purposes of this document, the following terms and definitions apply.
ISO and IEC maintain terminological databases for use in standardization at the following addresses:
— ISO Online browsing platform: available at https:// www .iso .org/ obp
— IEC Electropedia: available at http:// www .electropedia .org/
3.1
anaphora
linguistic mechanism by which the interpretation of a referring expression (3.7) depends on another
expression mentioned in the same text or discourse
Note 1 to entry: The notion of anaphora is more general than that of coreference (3.3): the interpretation of
anaphora is context-dependent, whereas coreference is determined rather rigidly independently to its possible
use of context (see Reference [25]).
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Note 2 to entry: The term is used in this document in its general sense since, for instance, no specific distinction
is made here with the notion of cataphora (i.e. coreference) with a more specific expression occurring later in a
discourse).
3.2
communicative segment
elementary portion of a multimodal interaction
3.3
coreference
identity of referents (3.6) of two referring expressions
Note 1 to entry: The concept covered here corresponds to the data category objectal identity, described in
Annex A.
3.4
objectal relation
relation between two discourse entities (3.6) reflecting their intended association from a referential
point of view
Note 1 to entry: The referential association may identify that they are identical, disjoint, or overlapping, or that
one includes the other (see References [6] and [25]).
3.5
reference
relation between a referring expression and a discourse entity (3.6) denoted by it
Note 1 to entry: The verb "to refer to" expresses such a relation: if there is a reference relation between an
expression x and a discourse entity e, then x is said to refer to e.
3.6
referent
discourse entity
extra-linguistic entity which is denoted, or pointed out, by a communicative segment (3.2)
Note 1 to entry: discourse entity is used preferably in the context of the description of the concrete syntax
whereas referent is used in the abstract syntax, but also when the underlying process is implied by the expression.
3.7
referring expression
communicative segment (3.2) that specifically designates an entity or an event, whether concrete or
abstract, discourse new or old, real or fictional
4 Basic principles
This document provides a generic framework for the annotation of reference phenomena in discourse,
whether in textual, spoken or multimodal form. As required by ISO 24612 and ISO 24617-6 principles, its
syntax is formulated at two levels, abstract and concrete. The abstract syntax characterizes in abstract
terms what RAF theoretically is. There can be a variety of concrete syntaxes that conform to a proposed
abstract syntax. XML-serialization is the most commonly accepted concrete syntax among them.
The proposed serialisation is entirely conceived as a customisation of the TEI P5 guidelines and
builds upon the existing constructs provided by ISO 24611 for morpho-syntactic annotation. Any
implementation of the present document shall also be compliant with the TEI P5 guidelines and
consequently the XML W3C recommendation.
As suggested by [25], this document focuses on the annotation of referring expressions such as noun
phrases in a language as its markable expressions, abbreviated as "markables". This includes entities
(John, the dog) as well as events, as expressed through noun phrases (the party, the meeting). Verbal
expressions denoting events may be marked as well, however, since they also may refer to events. For
example, “We met, and it lasted all morning.” It leaves out annotation of non-referring noun phrases and
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bound anaphora involving quantification to some extent. It does not address such tasks as annotation
of the relation between a subject and a predicative noun phrase (e.g., "John is a singer and guitar
player"). Nor does it treat type coreference. This includes so-called sloppy identities (e.g., "John loves
his wife and so does Bill") and verb-phrase anaphors (e.g., "Animals suffer as much as we do", “Peter
cuts vegetables much faster than I do (cut vegetables)”) in general. In delimiting its markables, RAF
attempts to make clear the theory of reference as much as possible without getting into theoretical
details and also the notion of coreference against a more general notion of anaphora.
5 Meta-model for reference annotation
5.1 Overview
The general meta-model for reference annotation is presented in Figure 1. It articulates the identification
and qualification on two complementary levels:
— the linguistic level where referring expressions can be segmented and qualified within the flow of a
discourse;
— the discourse domain where discourse entities referred to by referring expression are identified as
relevant for modelling the discourse domain.
Both objects may be further refined by data categories and links among them as described further on
in this document.
Referring expressions are also anchored on communicative segments, which may be linguistic segments
as well as any multimodal communicative sign (gesture, face movement, etc.) that is relevant for the
identification of the referring act.
Figure 1 — Meta model for reference annotation
5.2 Referring expressions
The referring expression component corresponds to the identification of one or several communicative
segments in the textual source as well as within other multimodal channels (visual or auditory) that
can be interpreted as a single referring act. A referring expression may for instance correspond to a
single continuous linguistic segment.
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EXAMPLE 1 [en] I ate [the apple] .
i
where the referring expression i is a single definite description.
It can also be the combination of simpler referring expressions as is the case within a coordination.
EXAMPLE 2 [en] I ate [[an apple] and [an orange] ] ,
i j k
where the referring expressions i and j are part of the larger referring expression k.
It can also be expressed by one or several sub-token markers, as is the case in agglutinative languages
or when referring morphemes are bound within another token.
EXAMPLE 3 [it] prendo[lo] (I take it.).
i
Depending on the serialisation, referring expressions can be represented as explicitly recursive, by
means of links among them, or implicitly recursive, by systematically pointing to their occurrences in
the source text.
Markables for reference annotation, however, include complex anaphors, zero pronouns, and discourse
deixis. Plural pronouns such as "they" may have partial antecedents, as illustrated by Example 4 below,
while zero pronouns often occur in conversations in some languages other than English, as illustrated
by a Korean example below in Example 5. Discourse deixis such as "this" and "that" refer to part of what
has been said in discourse. Spatial and temporal deixis such as "here", "there", "now", and "then" are
also to be marked up as referring expressions.
EXAMPLE 4 [en] John married Lisa yesterday and they went to Paris for their honeymoon.
i j {i,j} {i,j}
EXAMPLE 5 Dialogue in Korean [ko]: "Mia wass-ni?" (Did Mia come?)
"Yey, wass-e-yo". (Yes, [pro] came.)
NOTE The subject in the answer is implied and represented in the translation as a zero pronoun [pro].
EXAMPLE 6 [en] I don't believe that this story of his is true.
Markables are not restricted to referring expressions of nominal and pronominal forms. They may also
cover verbal (anaphoric) forms such as "so do(es)" or "do", as in the following examples.
EXAMPLE 7 [en] Mary loves her husband and so does Jane.
EXAMPLE 8 [en] Animals suffer as much as we do.
5.3 Data categories for referring expressions
Referring expressions may be characterised by a variety of data categories that are felt to be relevant
for the annotation project at hand. These categories may percolate from lower annotation levels (e.g.
morpho-syntactic, syntactic or semantic) or specifically relate to the occurrence context of the referring
expression. The following data categories may be considered as the basis for the characterisation of
referring expressions. When the corresponding data category is not defined in another ISO standard,
the definitions provided in Annex A shall be adopted.
— Morpho-syntactic categories relevant for referring expressions resulting from the percolation
of one or several properties of the components of the referring expression: grammatical gender
(grammaticalGender, ISO 24611), grammatical number (grammaticalNumber, ISO 24611), person
(person, ISO 24611).
— Syntactic or semantic data categories resulting from the identification and qualification of the
1)
referring expression as a syntactic constituent: syntactic category (syntacticCategory, ISO 24615-1 ),
1) With typical values such as nounPhrase and verbPhrase (ISO 24615-1).
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grammatical case (grammaticalCase, ISO 24611), grammatical function (grammaticalFunction,
ISO 24615-1).
— Semantic-pragmatic data categories: referential status, definiteness (definiteness, ISO 24611),
animacy.
EXAMPLE 9 [en] Lee loves [her husband] , but he doesn't care.
feminine,i feminine,i masculine j, masculine,j
5.4 Lexical relations
Lexical relations can be associated with data categories expressing lexical semantic relations that
usually form the basis of the referential interpretation process. These data categories define relations
between lexical items or, by inheritance from their nominal heads, nominal phrases. For reference
annotation, the relations that are defined between lexical items can be extended to larger linguistic
units, such as noun phrases. The data categories provided in Annex A cover the most commonly needed
cases: synonymy, hyponymy, hypernymy, compatibility, meronymy, and lexical identity.
EXAMPLE 10 [en] John bought a pear_i and Jane an apple_j, for they love these fruits_{i,j}. [hyponymy, together
with a subset relation at discourse entity level].
5.5 Discourse entities
The data categories associated with discourse entities concern properties of extra-linguistic entities
involved in the interpretation of referring expressions. These properties are marked grammatically in
some languages, for example animacy and alienability. The core properties elicited in this document are
the following ones:
— abstractness: A complex data category which can take two values: abstract and concrete;
— alienability: A complex data category which can take two values: alienable and inalienable;
— animacy: A complex data category which can take two values: animate and inanimate;
— cardinality: the provision of the number of entities within a discourse entity interpreted as a set.
— entity categorisation: A complex data category that allows the linking of a discourse entity to an
underlying classification or ontology
— natural gender: the provision of the natural gender for a discourse entity seen as a living entity;
precise definitions and sources are available in Annex A.
5.6 Objectal relations
Objectal relations are relations between discourse entities seen as extra-linguistic concepts. The
[25],[23],[24]
following relations form the basis of the present standard in this respect:
— objectal identity, to express an exact coreference relation;
— part of, when a discourse entity is identified as being a component of another one;
— member of, when a discourse entity is identified as an element within a set of referents;
— subset, when a discourse entity is seen as a set of entities all part of a larger set.
Precise definitions and sources are available in Annex A.
5.7 Metadata
The metadata for reference annotation documents contains global information concerning annotator(s),
tool, date, and pointer to scheme specification such as DCS (Data Category Selection). It can also
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include local information concerning inter-annotator agreement, confidence level with respect to tools,
revisions, and updates.
For the specification of such metadata, implementation shall comply to the TEI P5 guidelines or
ISO 24622-1. It may also comply to the OLAC (Open Language Archive Community) initiative.
6 Abstract syntax, concrete syntax, and semantics of annotations
6.1 Introduction
In this document, referential annotations are defined in accordance with the principles of semantic
annotation laid down in ISO 24617-6. Accordingly, annotations have a three-part definition consisting
of an abstract syntax, a concrete syntax, and a semantics. The abstract syntax defines annotations in
the sense of the Linguistic Annotation Framework (ISO 24612), namely as a specification of linguistic
information that is added to segments of source data, independent of the format in which the information
is represented. For semantic annotation, such specifications are pairs, triples and in general n-tuples of
semantic concepts. ISO 24612 defines representations, by contrast, as the rendering of annotations in
a particular format. A concrete syntax specifies a representation format for the annotation structures
defined by the corresponding abstract syntax. Finally, a semantics is defined for the annotations defined
by the abstract syntax, allowing alternative representation formats to share the same semantics.
The present clause specifies first the abstract syntax of reference annotations, subsequently their
semantics, and finally a concrete syntax for representing annotations as a customisation of the TEI P5
guidelines. The TEI P5 guidelines provide a generic XML vocabulary for the representation of textual
content and associated annotations. In representing various relevant features of referring expressions,
discourse entities and the relations between them, this document follows ISO 24610-1, as required by
ISO 24612.
6.2 Abstract syntax
The structures defined by an abstract syntax are n-tuples consisting of basic concepts, taken from a
store of such concepts called the ‘conceptual inventory’, or (nested) n-tuples of such structu
...

INTERNATIONAL ISO
STANDARD 24617-9
First edition
2019-12
Language resource management —
Semantic annotation framework —
Part 9:
Reference annotation framework
(RAF)
Reference number
ISO 24617-9:2019(E)
©
ISO 2019

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ISO 24617-9:2019(E)

COPYRIGHT PROTECTED DOCUMENT
© ISO 2019
All rights reserved. Unless otherwise specified, or required in the context of its implementation, no part of this publication may
be reproduced or utilized otherwise in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, or posting
on the internet or an intranet, without prior written permission. Permission can be requested from either ISO at the address
below or ISO’s member body in the country of the requester.
ISO copyright office
CP 401 • Ch. de Blandonnet 8
CH-1214 Vernier, Geneva
Phone: +41 22 749 01 11
Fax: +41 22 749 09 47
Email: copyright@iso.org
Website: www.iso.org
Published in Switzerland
ii © ISO 2019 – All rights reserved

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ISO 24617-9:2019(E)

Contents Page
Foreword .iv
Introduction .v
1 Scope . 1
2 Normative references . 1
3 Terms and definitions . 1
4 Basic principles . 2
5 Meta-model for reference annotation . 3
5.1 Overview . 3
5.2 Referring expressions . 3
5.3 Data categories for referring expressions . 4
5.4 Lexical relations . 5
5.5 Discourse entities . 5
5.6 Objectal relations . 5
5.7 Metadata . 5
6 Abstract syntax, concrete syntax, and semantics of annotations . 6
6.1 Introduction . 6
6.2 Abstract syntax . 6
6.2.1 Conceptual inventory . 6
6.2.2 Annotation structures: Entity structures and link structures . 7
6.3 Semantics . 8
6.3.1 Discourse entity structures and objectal relation links . 8
6.3.2 Referential expression entity structures and lexical relation links. 9
6.4 Implementing an XML serialisation compliant with the TEI P5 guidelines .10
6.4.1 Introduction .10
6.4.2 Namespace .10
6.4.3 Generic principles attached to a TEI compliant serialisation .10
6.4.4 Feature structures .11
6.4.5 General document architecture .12
6.5 Implementation of the Referring expression component .12
6.6 Implementation of the Discourse entity component .13
6.7 Implementation of referential relations.13
6.8 Objectal relations: grouping .14
6.9 Alternative linking: ambiguity .15
6.10 Multiple links .15
6.11 Representing referential chains .16
6.12 Bridging phenomena .16
Annex A (normative) Data categories for reference annotation .18
Annex B (informative) Complementary examples or partial examples referred to in the
main text of the document .25
Bibliography .26
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ISO 24617-9:2019(E)

Foreword
ISO (the International Organization for Standardization) is a worldwide federation of national standards
bodies (ISO member bodies). The work of preparing International Standards is normally carried out
through ISO technical committees. Each member body interested in a subject for which a technical
committee has been established has the right to be represented on that committee. International
organizations, governmental and non-governmental, in liaison with ISO, also take part in the work.
ISO collaborates closely with the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) on all matters of
electrotechnical standardization.
The procedures used to develop this document and those intended for its further maintenance are
described in the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 1. In particular the different approval criteria needed for the
different types of ISO documents should be noted. This document was drafted in accordance with the
editorial rules of the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 2. www .iso .org/ directives
Attention is drawn to the possibility that some of the elements of this document may be the subject of
patent rights. ISO shall not be held responsible for identifying any or all such patent rights. Details of
any patent rights identified during the development of the document will be in the Introduction and/or
on the ISO list of patent declarations received. www .iso .org/ patents
Any trade name used in this document is information given for the convenience of users and does not
constitute an endorsement.
For an explanation of the voluntary nature of standards, the meaning of ISO specific terms and
expressions related to conformity assessment, as well as information about ISO's adherence to the
World Trade Organization (WTO) principles in the Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT), see www .iso .org/
iso/ foreword .html.
This document was prepared by Technical Committee ISO/TC 37, Terminology and other language and
content resources, Subcommittee SC 4, Language resource management.
A list of all parts in the ISO 24617 series can be found on the ISO website.
Any feedback or questions on this document should be directed to the user’s national standards body. A
complete listing of these bodies can be found at www .iso .org/ members .html.
iv © ISO 2019 – All rights reserved

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ISO 24617-9:2019(E)

Introduction
This document is intended to complement the ISO 24617 series and to provide all the necessary
conceptual and technical mechanisms for the annotation of referential phenomena in multimodal
discourse. Reference phenomena are an essential component for the understanding and structuring of
discursive mechanisms, ranging from very basic pronominal relation to complex bridging anaphora.
Annotating such phenomena in an interoperable way improves the re-usability of language resources
in such applications in language technology as named entity recognition, text understanding and
synthesis, text summarization, information retrieval, automatic question-answering, man-machine
dialogue, and machine translation.
The content of this document builds upon various projects and software platforms that have been
dealing with reference annotation (RA), in particular the following References [9],[2],[16],[21],
[26],[25],[22],[5],[15],[13] but also the TEI P5 guidelines. Based on these and other previous works,
the Referential Annotation Framework (RAF) aims at providing a synthesized way of treating various
reference phenomena in discourse. In continuity with most practices in the field, RAF focuses on
marking up referring expressions in a discourse and the relations that hold between them and the
corresponding entities, whether this is based upon employing crowd sourcing or machine learning
strategies.
© ISO 2019 – All rights reserved v

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INTERNATIONAL STANDARD ISO 24617-9:2019(E)
Language resource management — Semantic annotation
framework —
Part 9:
Reference annotation framework (RAF)
1 Scope
This document provides a comprehensive model for the annotation and representation of referential
phenomena in natural language texts and multimodal interactions. Such phenomena can cover simple
anaphoric or coreferential mechanisms as well as more complex bridging or multimodal mechanisms. It
provides a reference serialisation in XML defined as a customisation of the TEI P5 guidelines. In addition,
the document describes the core data categories related to referential entities and link structures, and
also needed for the description of annotation schemes and serialisation mechanisms for implementing
conformant models as concrete data formats.
2 Normative references
The following documents are referred to in the text in such a way that some or all of their content
constitutes requirements of this document. For dated references, only the edition cited applies. For
undated references, the latest edition of the referenced document (including any amendments) applies.
ISO 24622-1, Language resource management — Component Metadata Infrastructure (CMDI) — Part 1:
The Component Metadata Model
TEI P5, Guidelines for Electronic Text Encoding and Interchange. Version 3.5.0. Last updated on 29th
January 2019. TEI Consortium. http:// www .tei -c .org/ Guidelines/ P5/
Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Fifth Edition), W3C Recommendation 26 November 2008.
https:// www .w3 .org/ TR/ REC -xml/
IETF BCP 47, Tags for Identifying Languages, September 2009. https:// tools .ietf .org/ html/ bcp47
3 Terms and definitions
For the purposes of this document, the following terms and definitions apply.
ISO and IEC maintain terminological databases for use in standardization at the following addresses:
— ISO Online browsing platform: available at https:// www .iso .org/ obp
— IEC Electropedia: available at http:// www .electropedia .org/
3.1
anaphora
linguistic mechanism by which the interpretation of a referring expression (3.7) depends on another
expression mentioned in the same text or discourse
Note 1 to entry: The notion of anaphora is more general than that of coreference (3.3): the interpretation of
anaphora is context-dependent, whereas coreference is determined rather rigidly independently to its possible
use of context (see Reference [25]).
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ISO 24617-9:2019(E)

Note 2 to entry: The term is used in this document in its general sense since, for instance, no specific distinction
is made here with the notion of cataphora (i.e. coreference) with a more specific expression occurring later in a
discourse).
3.2
communicative segment
elementary portion of a multimodal interaction
3.3
coreference
identity of referents (3.6) of two referring expressions
Note 1 to entry: The concept covered here corresponds to the data category objectal identity, described in
Annex A.
3.4
objectal relation
relation between two discourse entities (3.6) reflecting their intended association from a referential
point of view
Note 1 to entry: The referential association may identify that they are identical, disjoint, or overlapping, or that
one includes the other (see References [6] and [25]).
3.5
reference
relation between a referring expression and a discourse entity (3.6) denoted by it
Note 1 to entry: The verb "to refer to" expresses such a relation: if there is a reference relation between an
expression x and a discourse entity e, then x is said to refer to e.
3.6
referent
discourse entity
extra-linguistic entity which is denoted, or pointed out, by a communicative segment (3.2)
Note 1 to entry: discourse entity is used preferably in the context of the description of the concrete syntax
whereas referent is used in the abstract syntax, but also when the underlying process is implied by the expression.
3.7
referring expression
communicative segment (3.2) that specifically designates an entity or an event, whether concrete or
abstract, discourse new or old, real or fictional
4 Basic principles
This document provides a generic framework for the annotation of reference phenomena in discourse,
whether in textual, spoken or multimodal form. As required by ISO 24612 and ISO 24617-6 principles, its
syntax is formulated at two levels, abstract and concrete. The abstract syntax characterizes in abstract
terms what RAF theoretically is. There can be a variety of concrete syntaxes that conform to a proposed
abstract syntax. XML-serialization is the most commonly accepted concrete syntax among them.
The proposed serialisation is entirely conceived as a customisation of the TEI P5 guidelines and
builds upon the existing constructs provided by ISO 24611 for morpho-syntactic annotation. Any
implementation of the present document shall also be compliant with the TEI P5 guidelines and
consequently the XML W3C recommendation.
As suggested by [25], this document focuses on the annotation of referring expressions such as noun
phrases in a language as its markable expressions, abbreviated as "markables". This includes entities
(John, the dog) as well as events, as expressed through noun phrases (the party, the meeting). Verbal
expressions denoting events may be marked as well, however, since they also may refer to events. For
example, “We met, and it lasted all morning.” It leaves out annotation of non-referring noun phrases and
2 © ISO 2019 – All rights reserved

---------------------- Page: 7 ----------------------
ISO 24617-9:2019(E)

bound anaphora involving quantification to some extent. It does not address such tasks as annotation
of the relation between a subject and a predicative noun phrase (e.g., "John is a singer and guitar
player"). Nor does it treat type coreference. This includes so-called sloppy identities (e.g., "John loves
his wife and so does Bill") and verb-phrase anaphors (e.g., "Animals suffer as much as we do", “Peter
cuts vegetables much faster than I do (cut vegetables)”) in general. In delimiting its markables, RAF
attempts to make clear the theory of reference as much as possible without getting into theoretical
details and also the notion of coreference against a more general notion of anaphora.
5 Meta-model for reference annotation
5.1 Overview
The general meta-model for reference annotation is presented in Figure 1. It articulates the identification
and qualification on two complementary levels:
— the linguistic level where referring expressions can be segmented and qualified within the flow of a
discourse;
— the discourse domain where discourse entities referred to by referring expression are identified as
relevant for modelling the discourse domain.
Both objects may be further refined by data categories and links among them as described further on
in this document.
Referring expressions are also anchored on communicative segments, which may be linguistic segments
as well as any multimodal communicative sign (gesture, face movement, etc.) that is relevant for the
identification of the referring act.
Figure 1 — Meta model for reference annotation
5.2 Referring expressions
The referring expression component corresponds to the identification of one or several communicative
segments in the textual source as well as within other multimodal channels (visual or auditory) that
can be interpreted as a single referring act. A referring expression may for instance correspond to a
single continuous linguistic segment.
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EXAMPLE 1 [en] I ate [the apple] .
i
where the referring expression i is a single definite description.
It can also be the combination of simpler referring expressions as is the case within a coordination.
EXAMPLE 2 [en] I ate [[an apple] and [an orange] ] ,
i j k
where the referring expressions i and j are part of the larger referring expression k.
It can also be expressed by one or several sub-token markers, as is the case in agglutinative languages
or when referring morphemes are bound within another token.
EXAMPLE 3 [it] prendo[lo] (I take it.).
i
Depending on the serialisation, referring expressions can be represented as explicitly recursive, by
means of links among them, or implicitly recursive, by systematically pointing to their occurrences in
the source text.
Markables for reference annotation, however, include complex anaphors, zero pronouns, and discourse
deixis. Plural pronouns such as "they" may have partial antecedents, as illustrated by Example 4 below,
while zero pronouns often occur in conversations in some languages other than English, as illustrated
by a Korean example below in Example 5. Discourse deixis such as "this" and "that" refer to part of what
has been said in discourse. Spatial and temporal deixis such as "here", "there", "now", and "then" are
also to be marked up as referring expressions.
EXAMPLE 4 [en] John married Lisa yesterday and they went to Paris for their honeymoon.
i j {i,j} {i,j}
EXAMPLE 5 Dialogue in Korean [ko]: "Mia wass-ni?" (Did Mia come?)
"Yey, wass-e-yo". (Yes, [pro] came.)
NOTE The subject in the answer is implied and represented in the translation as a zero pronoun [pro].
EXAMPLE 6 [en] I don't believe that this story of his is true.
Markables are not restricted to referring expressions of nominal and pronominal forms. They may also
cover verbal (anaphoric) forms such as "so do(es)" or "do", as in the following examples.
EXAMPLE 7 [en] Mary loves her husband and so does Jane.
EXAMPLE 8 [en] Animals suffer as much as we do.
5.3 Data categories for referring expressions
Referring expressions may be characterised by a variety of data categories that are felt to be relevant
for the annotation project at hand. These categories may percolate from lower annotation levels (e.g.
morpho-syntactic, syntactic or semantic) or specifically relate to the occurrence context of the referring
expression. The following data categories may be considered as the basis for the characterisation of
referring expressions. When the corresponding data category is not defined in another ISO standard,
the definitions provided in Annex A shall be adopted.
— Morpho-syntactic categories relevant for referring expressions resulting from the percolation
of one or several properties of the components of the referring expression: grammatical gender
(grammaticalGender, ISO 24611), grammatical number (grammaticalNumber, ISO 24611), person
(person, ISO 24611).
— Syntactic or semantic data categories resulting from the identification and qualification of the
1)
referring expression as a syntactic constituent: syntactic category (syntacticCategory, ISO 24615-1 ),
1) With typical values such as nounPhrase and verbPhrase (ISO 24615-1).
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grammatical case (grammaticalCase, ISO 24611), grammatical function (grammaticalFunction,
ISO 24615-1).
— Semantic-pragmatic data categories: referential status, definiteness (definiteness, ISO 24611),
animacy.
EXAMPLE 9 [en] Lee loves [her husband] , but he doesn't care.
feminine,i feminine,i masculine j, masculine,j
5.4 Lexical relations
Lexical relations can be associated with data categories expressing lexical semantic relations that
usually form the basis of the referential interpretation process. These data categories define relations
between lexical items or, by inheritance from their nominal heads, nominal phrases. For reference
annotation, the relations that are defined between lexical items can be extended to larger linguistic
units, such as noun phrases. The data categories provided in Annex A cover the most commonly needed
cases: synonymy, hyponymy, hypernymy, compatibility, meronymy, and lexical identity.
EXAMPLE 10 [en] John bought a pear_i and Jane an apple_j, for they love these fruits_{i,j}. [hyponymy, together
with a subset relation at discourse entity level].
5.5 Discourse entities
The data categories associated with discourse entities concern properties of extra-linguistic entities
involved in the interpretation of referring expressions. These properties are marked grammatically in
some languages, for example animacy and alienability. The core properties elicited in this document are
the following ones:
— abstractness: A complex data category which can take two values: abstract and concrete;
— alienability: A complex data category which can take two values: alienable and inalienable;
— animacy: A complex data category which can take two values: animate and inanimate;
— cardinality: the provision of the number of entities within a discourse entity interpreted as a set.
— entity categorisation: A complex data category that allows the linking of a discourse entity to an
underlying classification or ontology
— natural gender: the provision of the natural gender for a discourse entity seen as a living entity;
precise definitions and sources are available in Annex A.
5.6 Objectal relations
Objectal relations are relations between discourse entities seen as extra-linguistic concepts. The
[25],[23],[24]
following relations form the basis of the present standard in this respect:
— objectal identity, to express an exact coreference relation;
— part of, when a discourse entity is identified as being a component of another one;
— member of, when a discourse entity is identified as an element within a set of referents;
— subset, when a discourse entity is seen as a set of entities all part of a larger set.
Precise definitions and sources are available in Annex A.
5.7 Metadata
The metadata for reference annotation documents contains global information concerning annotator(s),
tool, date, and pointer to scheme specification such as DCS (Data Category Selection). It can also
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include local information concerning inter-annotator agreement, confidence level with respect to tools,
revisions, and updates.
For the specification of such metadata, implementation shall comply to the TEI P5 guidelines or
ISO 24622-1. It may also comply to the OLAC (Open Language Archive Community) initiative.
6 Abstract syntax, concrete syntax, and semantics of annotations
6.1 Introduction
In this document, referential annotations are defined in accordance with the principles of semantic
annotation laid down in ISO 24617-6. Accordingly, annotations have a three-part definition consisting
of an abstract syntax, a concrete syntax, and a semantics. The abstract syntax defines annotations in
the sense of the Linguistic Annotation Framework (ISO 24612), namely as a specification of linguistic
information that is added to segments of source data, independent of the format in which the information
is represented. For semantic annotation, such specifications are pairs, triples and in general n-tuples of
semantic concepts. ISO 24612 defines representations, by contrast, as the rendering of annotations in
a particular format. A concrete syntax specifies a representation format for the annotation structures
defined by the corresponding abstract syntax. Finally, a semantics is defined for the annotations defined
by the abstract syntax, allowing alternative representation formats to share the same semantics.
The present clause specifies first the abstract syntax of reference annotations, subsequently their
semantics, and finally a concrete syntax for representing annotations as a customisation of the TEI P5
guidelines. The TEI P5 guidelines provide a generic XML vocabulary for the representation of textual
content and associated annotations. In representing various relevant features of referring expressions,
discourse entities and the relations between them, this document follows ISO 24610-1, as required by
ISO 24612.
6.2 Abstract syntax
The structures defined by an abstract syntax are n-tuples consisting of basic concepts, taken from a
store of such concepts called the ‘conceptual inventory’, or (nested) n-tuples of such structures. Two
types of structure are distinguished: entity structures and link structures. An entity structure contains
semantic information about a segment of primary data; link structures contain information about the
way two or more such segments are semantically related.
6.2.1 Conceptual inventory
The conceptual inventory of RAF is a 6-tuple: , where
1. M is a set of markables;
2. RF is a set of referential features of discourse entities;
3. GP is a set of grammatical properties of referring expressions;
4. RStat (‘referential status’) is a pragmatic property of discourse entities;
5. ORels is a set of objectal relations;
6. LRels is a set of lexical relations.
In line with the metamodel shown in Figure 1, the abstract syntax distinguishes two kinds of entity
structure, viz. for discourse entities (objects and events) and for referring expressions, and two kinds
of link structure, one for relating discourse entities and one for relating referring expressions.
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6.2.2 Annotation structures: Entity structures and link structures
Since an entity structure specifies certain semantic information about a
...

SLOVENSKI STANDARD
oSIST ISO/DIS 24617-9:2019
01-oktober-2019
Upravljanje jezikovnih virov - Ogrodje za semantično označevanje - 9. del:
Referenčni okvir označevanja (RAF)
Language resource management -- Semantic annotation framework -- Part 9: Reference
annotation framework (RAF)
Gestion des ressources linguistiques -- Cadre d'annotation sémantique -- Partie 9:
Référence (ISOref)
Ta slovenski standard je istoveten z: ISO/DIS 24617-9:2019
ICS:
01.020 Terminologija (načela in Terminology (principles and
koordinacija) coordination)
35.240.30 Uporabniške rešitve IT v IT applications in information,
informatiki, dokumentiranju in documentation and
založništvu publishing
oSIST ISO/DIS 24617-9:2019 en,fr,de
2003-01.Slovenski inštitut za standardizacijo. Razmnoževanje celote ali delov tega standarda ni dovoljeno.

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oSIST ISO/DIS 24617-9:2019
DRAFT INTERNATIONAL STANDARD
ISO/DIS 24617-9
ISO/TC 37/SC 4 Secretariat: KATS
Voting begins on: Voting terminates on:
2019-02-05 2019-04-30
Language resource management — Semantic annotation
framework —
Part 9:
Reference annotation framework (RAF)
Gestion des ressources linguistiques — Cadre d'annotation sémantique —
ICS: 01.020
THIS DOCUMENT IS A DRAFT CIRCULATED
FOR COMMENT AND APPROVAL. IT IS
THEREFORE SUBJECT TO CHANGE AND MAY
NOT BE REFERRED TO AS AN INTERNATIONAL
STANDARD UNTIL PUBLISHED AS SUCH.
IN ADDITION TO THEIR EVALUATION AS
BEING ACCEPTABLE FOR INDUSTRIAL,
This document is circulated as received from the committee secretariat.
TECHNOLOGICAL, COMMERCIAL AND
USER PURPOSES, DRAFT INTERNATIONAL
STANDARDS MAY ON OCCASION HAVE TO
BE CONSIDERED IN THE LIGHT OF THEIR
POTENTIAL TO BECOME STANDARDS TO
WHICH REFERENCE MAY BE MADE IN
Reference number
NATIONAL REGULATIONS.
ISO/DIS 24617-9:2019(E)
RECIPIENTS OF THIS DRAFT ARE INVITED
TO SUBMIT, WITH THEIR COMMENTS,
NOTIFICATION OF ANY RELEVANT PATENT
RIGHTS OF WHICH THEY ARE AWARE AND TO
©
PROVIDE SUPPORTING DOCUMENTATION. ISO 2019

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ISO/DIS 24617-9:2019(E)
7.9 Al ternative linking: ambiguity . 21

7.10 Multiple links . 22
7.11 Representing referential chains . 23
7.12 Bridging phenomena . 23
Annex A (normative) Data categories for reference annotation. 23
A.1 Properties of referring expressions. 24
A.1.1 Referential status. 24
A.1.2 Discourse old . 24
A.1.3 Discourse new . 24
A.2 Lexical relations .24
A.2.1 Linguistic referential relation. 24
A.2.2 Same head relation . 24
A.2.2 Incompatibility . 25
A.2.2 Compatibility . 25
A.2.4 Synonymy . 25
A.2.5 Hyponymy . 25
A.2 .6 H ype rny my . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
A.2.7 Meronymy . 26
A.2.7 Metonymy . 26
A.3 Properties of discourse entities . 26
A.3.1 Abstractness . 26
A.3.2 Abstract . 26
A.3 .3 Concret e . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
A.3.4 Ani macy . 27
A.3.5 Ani mate . 27
A.3.6 Inanimate . 27
A.3.7 Al ienability . 27
A.3.8 Al ienable . 28
A.3 .9 Ina lien able . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
A.3.10 Natural gender. 28
A.3 .11 Ca rdinal it y . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
A.4 Objectal refer ential relations . 29
A.4.1 Objectal relation . 29
A.4.2 Objectal identity . 29
A.4.3 Pa rt of . 29
A.4.4 Subset . 29
A.4.5 Membe r of . 30
A.4.6 Referential disjunction . 30
Annex B (informative) complementary examples or partial examples referred to in the main text
of the document . 30
B.1 Tokenized transcription of the utterance: “y el hombre pues claro, supongo, tundra sus
necesidades, ¿no?” (And the guy sure will have his needs, I guess.). Source (Adli, 2011).
See also ww w .sgscorpus.com . 30
B.2 Tokenized representation of the discourse: “Prendre une pomme. Eplucher le fruit” (Take an
apple. Peel the fruit.). Source: (Salmon-Alt & Romary 2004) . 31
Bibliography . 31
COPYRIGHT PROTECTED DOCUMENT
© ISO 2019
All rights reserved. Unless otherwise specified, or required in the context of its implementation, no part of this publication may
be reproduced or utilized otherwise in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, or posting
on the internet or an intranet, without prior written permission. Permission can be requested from either ISO at the address
below or ISO’s member body in the country of the requester.
ISO copyright office
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Phone: +41 22 749 01 11 © ISO 2018 – All rights reserved 3
Fax: +41 22 749 09 47
Email: copyright@iso.org
Website: www.iso.org
Published in Switzerland
ii © ISO 2019 – All rights reserved

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ISO DIS 24617-9:2018(E)
7.9 Alternative linking: ambiguity . 21
7.10 Multiple links . 22
7.11 Representing referential chains . 23
7.12 Bridging phenomena . 23
Annex A (normative) Data categories for reference annotation . 23
A.1 Properties of referring expressions . 24
A.1.1 Referential status . 24
A.1.2 Discourse old . 24
A.1.3 Discourse new . 24
A.2 Lexical relations . 24
A.2.1 Linguistic referential relation . 24
A.2.2 Same head relation . 24
A.2.2 Incompatibility . 25
A.2.2 Compatibility . 25
A.2.4 Synonymy . 25
A.2.5 Hyponymy . 25
A.2.6 Hypernymy . 26
A.2.7 Meronymy . 26
A.2.7 Metonymy . 26
A.3 Properties of discourse entities . 26
A.3.1 Abstractness . 26
A.3.2 Abstract . 26
A.3.3 Concrete . 27
A.3.4 Animacy . 27
A.3.5 Animate . 27
A.3.6 Inanimate . 27
A.3.7 Alienability . 27
A.3.8 Alienable . 28
A.3.9 Inalienable . 28
A.3.10 Natural gender . 28
A.3.11 Cardinality . 28
A.4 Objectal referential relations . 29
A.4.1 Objectal relation . 29
A.4.2 Objectal identity . 29
A.4.3 Part of . 29
A.4.4 Subset . 29
A.4.5 Member of . 30
A.4.6 Referential disjunction . 30
Annex B (informative) complementary examples or partial examples referred to in the main text
of the document . 30
B.1 Tokenized transcription of the utterance: “y el hombre pues claro, supongo, tundra sus
necesidades, ¿no?” (And the guy sure will have his needs, I guess.). Source (Adli, 2011).
See also www.sgscorpus.com . 30
B.2 Tokenized representation of the discourse: “Prendre une pomme. Eplucher le fruit” (Take an
apple. Peel the fruit.). Source: (Salmon-Alt & Romary 2004) . 31
Bibliography . 31
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oSIST ISO/DIS 24617-9:2019
ISO/DIS 24617-9:2019(E)
ISO DIS 24617-9:2018(E)
Foreword
ISO (the International Organization for Standardization) is a worldwide federation of national standards
bodies (ISO member bodies). The work of preparing International Standards is normally carried out
through ISO technical committees. Each member body interested in a subject for which a technical
committee has been established has the right to be represented on that committee. International
organizations, governmental and non-governmental, in liaison with ISO, also take part in the work. ISO
collaborates closely with the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) on all matters of
electrotechnical standardization.
The procedures used to develop this document and those intended for its further maintenance are
described in the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 1. In particular the different approval criteria needed for the
different types of ISO documents should be noted. This document was drafted in accordance with the
editorial rules of the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 2. www.iso.org/directives
Attention is drawn to the possibility that some of the elements of this document may be the subject of
patent rights. ISO shall not be held responsible for identifying any or all such patent rights. Details of any
patent rights identified during the development of the document will be in the Introduction and/or on
the ISO list of patent declarations received. www.iso.org/patents
Any trade name used in this document is information given for the convenience of users and does not
constitute an endorsement.
For an explanation on the meaning of ISO specific terms and expressions related to conformity
assessment, as well as information about ISO's adherence to the WTO principles in the Technical Barriers
to Trade (TBT) see the following URL: Foreword - Supplementary information
ISO 24617-9 was prepared by Technical Committee ISO/TC 37, Terminology and other language and
content resources, Subcommittee SC 4, Language resource management, WG 2 Semantic annotation.
ISO 24617 consists of the following parts, under the general title Language resource management —
Semantic annotation framework:
Part 1: Time and events (SemAF-Time, TimeML))
Part 2: Dialogue acts (SemAF-DA)
Part 3: Named entities (SemAF-NE)
Part 4: Semantic roles (SemAF-SR)
Part 5: Discourse structures (SemAF-DS)
Part 6: Principles of semantic annotation (SemAF Principles)
Part 7: Spatial information
Part 8: Semantic discourse relations (SemAF-SDR)
Part 9: Reference Annotation Framework (RAF)
Introduction
This document is intended to complement the ISO 24617 series (Language resource management --
Semantic annotation framework (SemAF)) and provide all the necessary conceptual and technical
mechanisms for the annotation of referential phenomena in multimodal discourse. Reference phenomena
are an essential component for the understanding and structuring of discursive mechanisms, ranging
from very basic pronominal relation to complex bridging anaphora. Annotating such phenomena in an
interoperable way will improve the re-usability of language resources in such applications in language
technology as named entity recognition, text understanding and synthesis, text summarization,
information retrieval, automatic question-answering, man-machine dialogue, and machine translation.
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The content of this document builds upon various projects and software platforms that have been dealing
with reference annotation (RA), in particular: Hirschman & Chinchor (1997)'s MUC-7 Coreference Task
Definition (CDT), Bruneseaux & Romary (1997), Poesio et al. (1999)'s MATE meta-scheme, Poesio &
Davies (2000), Poesio & Vieira (2000), van Deemter & Kibble (2000), Salmon-Alt (2001), Müller & Strube
(2001), Vieira et al. (2002), Byron & Gegg-Harrison (2004), Poesio (2004)'s GNOME, Passoneau (1996)'s
DRAMA, Müller & Strube (2006)'s MMAX2-based annotation scheme, Pustejovsky et al. (2013)'s Brandeis
annotation scheme, but also the TEI guidelines (TEI P5). Based on these and other previous works, the
Referential Annotation Framework (RAF) aims at providing a synthesized way of treating various
reference phenomena in discourse. In continuity with most practices in the field, RAF focuses on marking
up referring expressions in a discourse and the relations that hold between them and the corresponding
entities, whether this is based upon employing crowd sourcing or machine learning strategies.
As suggested by van Deemter & Kibble (2000), RAF focuses on the annotation of referring expressions
such as noun phrases in a language as its markable expressions, abbreviated as "markables". This
includes entities (John, the dog) as well as events, as expressed through noun phrases (the party, the
meeting). Verbal expressions denoting events may be marked as well, however, since they also may refer
to events. For example, “We met, and it lasted all morning.” It leaves out annotation of non-referring noun
phrases (NPs) and bound anaphora involving quantification to some extent. It does not address such
tasks as annotation of the relation between a subject and a predicative NP (e.g., "John is a singer and
guitar player"). Nor does it treat type coreference. This includes so-called sloppy identities (e.g., "John
loves his wife and so does Bill") and verb-phrase anaphors (e.g., "Animals suffer as much as we do",
“Peter cuts vegetables much faster than I do (cut vegetables)”) in general. In delimiting its markables,
RAF attempts to make clear the theory of reference as much as possible without getting into theoretical
details and also the notion of coreference against a more general notion of anaphora.
This document also has benefited from the in depth work carried out within the EU project e-Content
Lirics e-Content/Lirics (2004 − 2006; http://lirics.loria.fr/).
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ISO DIS 24617-9:2018(E)
Language resource management – Semantic annotation framework –
Part 9: Reference Annotation Framework (RAF)
1 Scope
This document aims at providing a comprehensive model for the annotation and representation of
referential phenomena in natural language texts and multimodal interactions. Such phenomena may
cover simple anaphoric or coreferential mechanisms as well as more complex bridging or multimodal
mechanisms. It provides a reference serialisation in XML defined as a customisation of the TEI guidelines.
In addition, the document describes the core data categories related to referential entities and link
structures, and also needed for the description of annotation schemes and serialisation mechanisms for
implementing conformant models as concrete data formats.
2 Normative references
The following documents, in whole or in part, are normatively referenced in this document and are
indispensable for its application. For dated references, only the edition cited applies. For undated
references, the latest edition of the referenced document (including any amendments) applies.
ISO 24610-1:2006, Language resource management — Feature structure — Part 1: Feature structure
representation (FSR)
ISO 24612:2012, Language resource management — Linguistic annotation framework (LAF)
ISO DIS 24617-6:2015, Language resource management — Semantic annotation framework — Part 1:
Principles of semantic annotation (SemAF-Principles)
ISO 24611:2012 Language resource management — Morpho-syntactic annotation framework (MAF)
TEI Consortium, eds. TEI P5: Guidelines for Electronic Text Encoding and Interchange. [Version number].
[Last modified date]. TEI Consortium. http://www.tei-c.org/Guidelines/P5/ ([Date of access]). ⇐ Note:
to be completed when finalising the standard
The Unicode Standard (6.0 ed.). Mountain View, California, USA: The Unicode Consortium. ISBN 978-1-
936213-01-6. http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode6.0.0/
Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Fifth Edition), W3C Recommendation 26 November 2008.
https://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml/
3 Terms and definitions
ISO and IEC maintain terminological databases for use in standardization at the following addresses:
— IEC Electropedia: available at http://www.electropedia.org/
— ISO Online browsing platform: available at http://www.iso.org/obp
Note: terms corresponding to data categories are not mentioned here, see annex A for a full
documentation of the normative data categories introduced by this document.
3.1
anaphora
linguistic mechanism by which the interpretation of a referring expression (3.7) depends on another
expression mentioned in the same text or discourse
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Note 1 to entry: The notion of anaphora is more general than that of coreference (3.2): the interpretation of anaphora
is context-dependent, whereas coreference is determined rather rigidly independently to its possible use of context
(see van Deemter & Keeble (2000)).
Note 2 to entry: The term is used in this document in its general sense since, for instance, no specific distinction is
made here with the notion of cataphora (i.e. coreference (3.2) with a more specific expression occurring later in a
discourse).
3.2
communicative segment
elementary portion of a multimodal interaction
3.3
coreference
equality of referents (3.6) of two linguistic expressions
Note 1 to entry: the concept covered here corresponds to the data category objectal identity, described in
Annex A
3.4
objectal relation
relation between two discourse entities (3.6) reflecting their intended association from a referential
point of view.
Note 1 to entry:, The referential association may identify that they are identical, disjoint, or overlapping,
or that one includes the other (see Cruse, 1986 and van Deemter and Kibble, 2000)
3.5
reference
relation between a linguistic expression and a discourse entity (3.6) denoted by it
Note 1 to entry: The verb "to refer to" expresses such a relation: if there is a reference relation between an
expression x and a discourse entity e, then x is said to refer to e
3.6
referent
discourse entity
extra-linguistic entity which is denoted, or pointed out, by a communicative segment
3.7
referring expression
Communicative segment that specifically designates an entity or an event, whether concrete or abstract,
discourse new or old, real or fictional
5 Basic requirements
RAF provides a generic framework for the annotation of reference phenomena in discourse, whether in
textual, spoken or multimodal form. As required by ISO 24612 LAF and ISO 24617-6 SemAF-Principles,
its syntax is formulated at two levels, abstract and concrete. The abstract syntax characterizes in abstract
terms what RAF theoretically is. There can be a variety of concrete syntaxes that conform to a proposed
abstract syntax. XML-serialization is the most commonly accepted concrete syntax among them.
The proposed serialisation is entirely conceived as a customisation of the TEI guidelines and builds upon
the existing constructs provided by ISO 24611 for morpho-syntactic annotation.
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6 Meta-model for reference annotation
6.1 Overview
The general meta-model for reference annotation is presented in figure 1. It articulates the identification
and qualification on two complementary levels:
 The linguistic level where referring expressions can be segmented and qualified within the flow of
a discourse;
 The discourse domain where discourse entities referred to by referring expression are identified
as relevant for modelling the discourse domai
...

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