On 5/7/08, Stephen Reed <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> I have not heard about Rus form.  Could you provide a link or reference?


This is one of the papers:
http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/cache/papers/cs/22812/http:zSzzSzwww.seas.smu.eduzSz~vasilezSzictai2001.pdf/rus01high.pdf
you can find some examples in the figures.

The main thing is that (nearly) every word is "reified".

For example, for "John loves Mary", we say that there is an entity e1
which is a John, and entity e2 which is an act of loving, and an
entity e3 which is a Mary.

So we have these formulae:
    john(e1)
    mary(e3)
    love(e2, e1, e3)

Anyway, something like that....

Rus form is popularly used in text entailment programs.

YKY

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agi
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