Likert Semantic Word Similarity (LSWS) Rating Scale
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		A Likert Semantic Word Similarity (LSWS) Rating Scale is a Semantic Word Similarity Rating Scale based on a Likert psychometric scale.
- AKA: Likert Word Similarity Scale.
- Example(s):
- a five-point Likert similarity scale used in the SemEval-2017 Task 2:
 
- 4 - Very similar - The two words are synonyms (e.g., midday-noon or motherboard-mainboard). - 3 - Similar - The two words share many of the important ideas of their meaning but include slightly different details. - They refer to similar but not identical concepts (e.g., lion-zebra or firefighter-policeman). - 2 - Slightly similar - The two words do not have a very similar meaning, but share a common topic/domain/function and ideasor concepts that are related (e.g., house-window or airplane-pilot). - 1 - Dissimilar - The two words describe clearly dissimilar concepts, but may share some small details, a far relationship or a domain in common and might be likely to be found together in a longer document on the same topic (e.g., software-keyboard or driver-suspension). - 0 - Totally dissimilar and unrelated - The two words do not mean the same thing and are not on the same topic (e.g., 'pencil-frog or PlayStation-monarchy). 
 
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- Counter-Example(s):
- See: Word Similarity Measure, Semantic Similarity Score, Rating Scale, Mokken Scale, Rasch Model, Psychometric Scale.
References
2017
- (Camacho-Collados et al., 2017) ⇒ Jose Camacho-Collados, Mohammad Taher Pilehvar, Nigel Collier, and Roberto Navigli. (2017). “SemEval-2017 Task 2: Multilingual and Cross-lingual Semantic Word Similarity.” In: Proceedings of the 11th International Workshop on Semantic Evaluation (SemEval@ACL 2017).