An event-noun is a noun that has an argument structure similar to a predicate. Recent works, including those considered stateof-the-art, ignore event-nouns or build a single model for solving both Japanese predicate argument structure analysis (PASA) and eventnoun argument structure analysis (ENASA). However, because there are interactions between predicates and event-nouns, it is not sufficient to target only predicates. To address this problem, we present a multi-task learning method for PASA and ENASA. Our multitask models improved the performance of both tasks compared to a single-task model by sharing knowledge from each task. Moreover, in PASA, our models achieved state-of-the-art results in overall F1 scores on the NAIST Text Corpus. In addition, this is the first work to employ neural networks in ENASA.
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