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  <front>
    <journal-meta>
      <journal-title-group>
        <journal-title>Santiago de Compostela, August</journal-title>
      </journal-title-group>
    </journal-meta>
    <article-meta>
      <title-group>
        <article-title>Ontological Proxies to Augment the Expressiveness of Discourse Analysis</article-title>
      </title-group>
      <contrib-group>
        <contrib contrib-type="author">
          <string-name>Spain cesar.gonzalez-perez@incipit.csic.es</string-name>
        </contrib>
      </contrib-group>
      <pub-date>
        <year>2020</year>
      </pub-date>
      <volume>29</volume>
      <issue>2020</issue>
      <fpage>2</fpage>
      <lpage>4</lpage>
      <abstract>
        <p>Discourse analysis usually focuses on what is being said, following the text very literally, and pays little or no attention to the world to which the text refers. We argue that considering the ontology to which a discourse refers as well as the text itself provides a richer and more useful representation of the discourse. To this end, we propose the notion of ontological proxies, i.e. conceptual artefacts that connect elements in the argumentation structure to the associated ontology elements.</p>
      </abstract>
    </article-meta>
  </front>
  <body>
    <sec id="sec-1">
      <title>PROBLEM AND MOTIVATION</title>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-2">
      <title>PROPOSED APPROACH</title>
      <p>In this talk I argue that considering the ontology to which a discourse refers, together with the text itself, provides a richer and
more useful representation of the discourse. In other words, I propose that a model of a part of the world must accompany every
model of a discourse, and that relations between elements in these models must be also described. In this manner, the joint model
will describe a discourse plus the entities of the world that this discourse refers to in an interconnected manner.</p>
      <p>
        There is an extensive body of literature on conceptual models (or ontologies), and conceptual modelling is practised today
through the use of many techniques, languages and tools, such as ConML
        <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref2">(Gonzalez-Perez 2018)</xref>
        , OWL
        <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref7">(World Wide Web
Consortium 2012)</xref>
        or UML
        <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref5">(OMG 2017)</xref>
        . Inventing a new modelling language to cater for the need described in the previous
section would not make sense, as it would be redundant and most likely inferior to those that already exist. For this reason, I
propose the notion of ontological proxies. An ontological proxy is an element in a discourse model that stands for another element
in an associated conceptual model. In other words, ontological proxies allow us to point to the right model elements in a
fullyfledged conceptual model from a discourse model, thus connecting the two (Figure 1).
      </p>
      <p>Copyright © 2020 for this paper by its authors. Use permitted under Creative Commons License Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0).
Discourse Model</p>
      <p>Conceptual Model</p>
      <p>In this manner, ontological proxies are part of the basic building blocks from which we can construct discourse models, together
with other discourse-oriented primitives. But, given the fact that they are, by definition, proxies for something else, they must be
kept lightweight and minimal. Otherwise, we would be missing the point of having them in the first place. For this reason, we
propose that ontological proxies are defined in terms of a minimal set of concepts, properties, and relationships that can easily map
to the most common conceptual modelling languages. Specifically, we propose the following primitives:
• Entity, which represents particulars in the world such as the computer I am using or the 5/2016 Act on Cultural</p>
      <p>Heritage, for example.
• Value, which represent atomic qualities or quantities of particulars, such as me.Age = 52.
• Reference, which represent connections between particulars, such as me.WorksAt = Incipit.
• Category, which represent universals such as Computer, Person or Law.
• Property, which represent values of categories, such as Person.Age or Law.PublicationDate.</p>
      <p>• Association, which represent references between categories, such as Person.WorksAt or Law.AppliesIn.</p>
      <p>Once these primitives are in place, we can assume that any proposition in the analysis is able to denote instances of them. For
example, the proposition “my house was built in 1994” denotes an entity through the fragment “my house” plus an associated
value through the fragment “was built in 1994”.
3</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-3">
      <title>EXAMPLE</title>
      <p>Let’s consider the following exchange:</p>
      <p>Speaker 1: The 5/2016 law on cultural heritage says that you cannot build close to a protected site.</p>
      <p>Speaker 2: But the law also says that I have the right to buy and possess any land, so…</p>
      <p>Here, speaker 1 is clearly referring to the 5/2016 Act on Cultural Heritage, which is a very specific legal text in Galicia, and
using it as grounds to back up their claim. Speaker 2 replies that “the law” apparently contradicts this. However, it is not clear
from the text whether “the law” refers to the very same 5/2016 Act on Cultural Heritage or, to the contrary, to ‘the law’ as the
abstract entity of the regulations that apply here and now. When analysing this text, we must develop a mental model that allows
us to interpret speaker 2’s utterance and connect it to speaker 1’s claim. We may be right or wrong in our interpretation, but we
should capture what it is, document it, and connect it to the discourse analysis. In this case, I imagine that speaker 2 refers to the
law in general, rather than the 5/2016 Act on Cultural Heritage. This means that:
• The fragment “The 5/2016 law on cultural heritage” in the locution spoken by speaker 1 denotes an entity, which I
will call ach (for “Act on Cultural Heritage”).
• The fragment “the law” in the locution spoken by speaker 2 denotes a different entity, which I will call glr (for
“general laws and regulations).</p>
      <p>Just by doing this, we have documented our interpretation that the speakers are referring to different things, and thus there may
be no conflict after all. Any reader of our discourse analysis will be able to see this explicitly. But we can go further. For example,
we can construct a conceptual model that describes the common ontology shared by speakers 1 and 2, by using the evidence
provided by the text and its context. For example, I may construct a ConML model that includes objects for the ach and glr
ontological proxies, plus a reference IsPartOf from the former to the latter. In this manner, I am capturing the fact that the 5/2016
Act on Cultural Heritage is a part of a bigger whole. Note that nowhere in the text is said that the 5/2016 Act on Cultural Heritage
is part of a larger legal body to which speaker 2 is referring; this is something that only exists in the associated conceptual model.
Furthermore, by capturing this fact in the conceptual model, we are documenting our position that it is reasonable to think that
both speakers share the belief that the 5/2016 Act on Cultural Heritage does not exist in isolation but exists as part of a larger legal
body.</p>
      <p>Now, we can reason about the claims made by the speakers in their exchange using the extended information provided by the
conceptual model. For example, the connotation of the “but” marker in speaker 2’s locution can be reassessed in the light of the
above mentioned whole/part relationship. What initially may have looked like a conflict, now it is more nuanced, as the speakers
seem to be dealing with a case of a legal exception or particular case. This provides additional information that allows us to
understand their apparent disagreement, and even act to reconcile their points of view if that is what we wanted.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-4">
      <title>CONCLUSION</title>
      <p>Ontological proxies are simple and lightweight elements in a discourse model that allow us to connect what is being said in the
discourse to the associated things in the world, via a conceptual model. Doing this provides additional information to reason about
the argumentation structure and contents.</p>
      <p>In my talk I will provide additional details on how ontological proxies are defined in the context of a discourse modelling
language, how denotations work, and how conceptual models can be used to connect different discourses in order to perform
intertextual analyses. This is especially interesting when analysing texts that refer to a common set of things in the world, such as
political discourses from different candidates addressing a hot topic, or tweets by different users about the same thing.</p>
    </sec>
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