Getting the dependency parse
A dependency parse is a tool that shows dependencies in a sentence. For example, in the sentence The cat wore a hat, the root of the sentence is the verb, wore, and both the subject, the cat, and the object, a hat, are dependents. The dependency parse can be very useful in many NLP tasks since it shows the grammatical structure of the sentence, with the subject, the main verb, the object, and so on. It can then be used in downstream processing.
The spaCy
NLP engine does the dependency parse as part of its overall analysis. The dependency parse tags explain the role of each word in the sentence. ROOT
is the main word that all other words depend on, usually the verb.
Getting ready
We will use spaCy
to create the dependency parse. The required packages are part of the Poetry environment.
How to do it…
We will take a few sentences from the sherlock_holmes1.txt
file to illustrate the dependency parse. The steps are as follows:
- Run the file and language utility notebooks:
%run -i "../util/file_utils.ipynb" %run -i "../util/lang_utils.ipynb"
- Define the sentence we will be parsing:
sentence = 'I have seldom heard him mention her under any other name.'
- Define a function that will print the word, its grammatical function embedded in the
dep_
attribute, and the explanation of that attribute. Thedep_
attribute of theToken
object shows the grammatical function of the word in the sentence:def print_dependencies(sentence, model): doc = model(sentence) for token in doc: print(token.text, "\t", token.dep_, "\t", spacy.explain(token.dep_))
- Now, let’s use this function on the first sentence in our list. We can see that the verb
heard
is theROOT
word of the sentence, with all other words depending on it:print_dependencies(sentence, small_model)
The result should be as follows:
I nsubj nominal subject have aux auxiliary seldom advmod adverbial modifier heard ROOT root him nsubj nominal subject mention ccomp clausal complement her dobj direct object under prep prepositional modifier any det determiner other amod adjectival modifier name pobj object of preposition . punct punctuation
- To explore the dependency parse structure, we can use the attributes of the
Token
class. Using theancestors
andchildren
attributes, we can get the tokens that this token depends on and the tokens that depend on it, respectively. The function to print the ancestors is as follows:def print_ancestors(sentence, model): doc = model(sentence) for token in doc: print(token.text, [t.text for t in token.ancestors])
- Now, let’s use this function on the first sentence in our list:
print_ancestors(sentence, small_model)
The output will be as follows. In the result, we see that
heard
has no ancestors since it is the main word in the sentence. All other words depend on it, and in fact, containheard
in their ancestor lists.The dependency chain can be seen by following the ancestor links for each word. For example, if we look at the word
name
, we see that its ancestors areunder
,mention
, andheard
. The immediate parent ofname
isunder
, the parent ofunder
ismention
, and the parent ofmention
isheard
. A dependency chain will always lead to the root, or the main word, of the sentence:I ['heard'] have ['heard'] seldom ['heard'] heard [] him ['mention', 'heard'] mention ['heard'] her ['mention', 'heard'] under ['mention', 'heard'] any ['name', 'under', 'mention', 'heard'] other ['name', 'under', 'mention', 'heard'] name ['under', 'mention', 'heard'] . ['heard']
- To see all the children, use the following function. This function prints out each word and the words that depend on it, its children:
def print_children(sentence, model): doc = model(sentence) for token in doc: print(token.text,[t.text for t in token.children])
- Now, let’s use this function on the first sentence in our list:
print_children(sentence, small_model)
The result should be as follows. Now, the word
heard
has a list of words that depend on it since it is the main word in the sentence:I [] have [] seldom [] heard ['I', 'have', 'seldom', 'mention', '.'] him [] mention ['him', 'her', 'under'] her [] under ['name'] any [] other [] name ['any', 'other'] . []
- We can also see left and right children in separate lists. In the following function, we print the children as two separate lists, left and right. This can be useful when doing grammatical transformations in the sentence:
def print_lefts_and_rights(sentence, model): doc = model(sentence) for token in doc: print(token.text, [t.text for t in token.lefts], [t.text for t in token.rights])
- Let’s use this function on the first sentence in our list:
print_lefts_and_rights(sentence, small_model)
The result should be as follows:
I [] [] have [] [] seldom [] [] heard ['I', 'have', 'seldom'] ['mention', '.'] him [] [] mention ['him'] ['her', 'under'] her [] [] under [] ['name'] any [] [] other [] [] name ['any', 'other'] [] . [] []
- We can also see the subtree that the token is in by using this function:
def print_subtree(sentence, model): doc = model(sentence) for token in doc: print(token.text, [t.text for t in token.subtree])
- Let’s use this function on the first sentence in our list:
print_subtree(sentence, small_model)
The result should be as follows. From the subtrees that each word is part of, we can see the grammatical phrases that appear in the sentence, such as the noun phrase,
any other name
, and the prepositional phrase,under any
other name
:I ['I'] have ['have'] seldom ['seldom'] heard ['I', 'have', 'seldom', 'heard', 'him', 'mention', 'her', 'under', 'any', 'other', 'name', '.'] him ['him'] mention ['him', 'mention', 'her', 'under', 'any', 'other', 'name'] her ['her'] under ['under', 'any', 'other', 'name'] any ['any'] other ['other'] name ['any', 'other', 'name'] . ['.']
See also
The dependency parse can be visualized graphically using the displaCy
package, which is part of spaCy
. Please see Chapter 7, Visualizing Text Data, for a detailed recipe on how to do the visualization.