Natural language processing in Clojure based on the Stanford-CoreNLP parser.
We need help getting this project moving. Please feel free to email to leontalbot@gmail.com to join the org, or drop a line in the chat room.
This is a work in progress, currently in the POC phase.
(use 'org.clojurenlp.core)
(tokenize "This is a simple sentence.")
;; => '({:token "This", :start-offset 0, :end-offset 4}
{:token "is", :start-offset 5, :end-offset 7}
{:token "a", :start-offset 8, :end-offset 9}
{:token "simple", :start-offset 10, :end-offset 16}
{:token "sentence", :start-offset 17, :end-offset 25}
{:token ".", :start-offset 25, :end-offset 26})
To get a list of TaggedWord
objects:
(use 'org.clojurenlp.core)
;; use any of these:
(-> "Short and sweet." tokenize pos-tag)
(-> "Short and sweet." split-sentences first pos-tag)
(-> ["Short" "and" "sweet" "."] pos-tag)
(-> "Short and sweet." pos-tag)
;; => [#<TaggedWord Short/JJ> #<TaggedWord and/CC> ...]
To return a tag string from TaggedWord object:
(->> "Short and sweet." tokenize pos-tag first .tag)
;; => JJ
(->> "Short and sweet." tokenize pos-tag (map #(.tag %)))
;; => ("JJ" "CC" "JJ" ".")
For more information, see the relevant Javadoc
To tag named entities utilizing standard Stanford NER model:
(use 'org.clojurenlp.core)
(def pipeline (initialize-pipeline))
(def text "The United States of America will be tagged as a location")
(tag-ner pipeline text)
Training your own model How to Train Your Own Model
To tag named entities utilizing custom trained model:
(use 'org.clojurenlp.core)
(def pipeline (initialize-pipeline "path-to-serialized-model"))
(def text "The United States of America will be tagged as a location")
(tag-ner pipeline text)
Utilizing either NER tagging strategy, a map containing the original text, sentences, tokens, and ner tags will be returned.
To parse a sentence:
(use 'org.clojurenlp.core)
(parse (tokenize text))
You will get back a LabeledScoredTreeNode which you can plug in to other Stanford CoreNLP functions or can convert to a standard Treebank string with:
(str (parse (tokenize text)))
(dependency-graph "I like cheese.")
will parse the sentence and return the dependency graph as a loom graph, which you can then traverse with standard graph algorithms like shortest path, etc. You can also view it:
(def graph (dependency-graph "I like cheese."))
(use 'loom.io)
(view graph)
This requires GraphViz to be installed.
© 2018 The ClojureNLP Organization and Contributors
Distributed under the Apache 2.0 License. See LICENSE for details.
- Leon Talbot @leontalbot
- Andrew McLoud @andrewmcloud
- Cory Giles
- Hans Engel
- Damien Stanton
- Andrew McLoud
- Leon Talbot
- Marek Owsikowski