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RST* text mapping *Rhetorical Structure Theory

RST* text mapping *Rhetorical Structure Theory. The text: 1) Lactose and Lactase 2) Lactose is milk sugar; 3) the enzyme lactase breaks it down. 4) For want of lactase most adults cannot digest milk.

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RST* text mapping *Rhetorical Structure Theory

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  1. RST* text mapping*Rhetorical Structure Theory

  2. The text: 1) Lactose and Lactase 2) Lactose is milk sugar; 3) the enzyme lactase breaks it down. 4) For want of lactase most adults cannot digest milk. 5) In populations that drink milk the adults have more lactase, perhaps through natural selection. 6) Norman Kretchmer, Scientific American, page 70, October 1972.

  3. The text: 1) Lactose and Lactase 2) Lactose is milk sugar; 3) the enzyme lactase breaks it down. 4) For want of lactase most adults cannot digest milk. 5) In populations that drink milk the adults have more lactase, perhaps through natural selection. 6) Norman Kretchmer, Scientific American, page 70, October 1972. RST Analysis from the RST web site (http://www.sfu.ca/rst) This abstract is nearly half background information. One of the reasons that backgrounding is not signalled by its own distinct signal (such as a conjunction) may be that such a signal would in effect say that the author thought the reader would not know this information. Some readers might find that mildly condescending if it were made explicit. Backgrounding is seldom signalled explicitly.

  4. Nucleus:Satellite relations The most frequent structural pattern is that two spans of text (virtually always adjacent, but exceptions can be found) are related such that one of them has a specific role relative to the other. RST says that the nucleus is more essential to the text than the satellite

  5. Multinuclear relations There are also relations that do not carry a definite selection of one nucleus.

  6. More RST relations

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