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The Handbook of NLP with Gensim

You're reading from   The Handbook of NLP with Gensim Leverage topic modeling to uncover hidden patterns, themes, and valuable insights within textual data

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803244945
Length 310 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Chris Kuo Chris Kuo
Author Profile Icon Chris Kuo
Chris Kuo
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Table of Contents (24) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: NLP Basics
2. Chapter 1: Introduction to NLP FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Text Representation 4. Chapter 3: Text Wrangling and Preprocessing 5. Part 2: Latent Semantic Analysis/Latent Semantic Indexing
6. Chapter 4: Latent Semantic Analysis with scikit-learn 7. Chapter 5: Cosine Similarity 8. Chapter 6: Latent Semantic Indexing with Gensim 9. Part 3: Word2Vec and Doc2Vec
10. Chapter 7: Using Word2Vec 11. Chapter 8: Doc2Vec with Gensim 12. Part 4: Topic Modeling with Latent Dirichlet Allocation
13. Chapter 9: Understanding Discrete Distributions 14. Chapter 10: Latent Dirichlet Allocation 15. Chapter 11: LDA Modeling 16. Chapter 12: LDA Visualization 17. Chapter 13: The Ensemble LDA for Model Stability 18. Part 5: Comparison and Applications
19. Chapter 14: LDA and BERTopic 20. Chapter 15: Real-World Use Cases 21. Assessments 22. Index 23. Other Books You May Enjoy

Introduction to Word2Vec

In NLP development, an important discovery is the distributional hypothesis. It states that words that occur in similar contexts tend to have similar meanings. For example, the words cat and dog, temple and monk, or king and queen are sometimes seen together. In contrast, the words iron and monk, or car and sky appear less often in the same contexts. If words are semantically similar, they tend to show up in similar contexts and with similar distributions. The distributional hypothesis received an interesting comment from the linguist J. R. Firth in the 1950s: “You shall know a word by the company it keeps” [1]. This became the theoretical foundation for many computational models of word meaning and word representation.

The distributional hypothesis paves the way for the quantification of word similarities. In 2013, a Google team led by Tomas Mikolov published two milestone papers for Word2Vec and Doc2Vec [2] [3]. A word can be represented...

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