Seeing the Shift: Keep an Eye on Semantic Changes in Times of LLMs
Raphael Buchmüller - University of Konstanz, Konstanz, Germany
Friederike Körte - University of Konstanz, Konstanz, Germany
Daniel Keim - University of Konstanz, Konstanz, Germany
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Room: Bayshore I
2024-10-13T18:05:00ZGMT-0600Change your timezone on the schedule page
2024-10-13T18:05:00Z
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Abstract
This position paper discusses the profound impact of Large Language Models (LLMs) on semantic change, emphasizing the need for comprehensive monitoring and visualization techniques. Building on established concepts from linguistics, we examine the interdependency between mental and language models, discussing how LLMs influence and are influenced by human cognition and societal context. We introduce three primary theories to conceptualize such influences: Recontextualization, Standardization, and Semantic Dementia, illustrating how LLMs drive, standardize, and potentially degrade language semantics.Our subsequent review categorizes methods for visualizing semantic change into frequency-based, embedding-based, and context-based techniques, being first in assessing their effectiveness in capturing linguistic evolution: Embedding-based methods are highlighted as crucial for a detailed semantic analysis, reflecting both broad trends and specific linguistic changes. We underscore the need for novel visual, interactive tools to monitor and explain semantic changes induced by LLMs, ensuring the preservation of linguistic diversity and mitigating linguistic biases. This work provides essential insights for future research on semantic change visualization and the dynamic nature of language evolution in the times of LLMs.