Rhetorical relations, also called coherence or
discourse relations, are
paratactic (coordinate) or
hypotactic (subordinate) relations that hold across two or more text spans. The logical arrangement of relations in a text contributes to its
coherence by connecting different propositions in a relational structure. RST using rhetorical relations provides a systematic way for an analyst to analyze the underlying intention of a text. The analysis is usually built by reading the text and constructing a tree using the relations. The following example is a title and summary, appearing at the top of an article in
Scientific American magazine (adapted from Ramachandran and Anstis, 1986). The original text, broken into numbered units, is: • [Title:] The Perception of Apparent Motion • [Abstract:] When the motion of an intermittently seen object is ambiguous • the visual system resolves confusion • by applying some tricks • that reflect a built-in knowledge of properties of the physical world. In the figure, the numbers 1-5 show the corresponding units from the text above. Unit 5 provides an "elaboration" on unit 4, and therefore constitutes a less prominent satellite of unit 4, which acts as a nucleus for the relation. Units 4-5 form a relation "Means", explaining the means by which the visual system resolves confusion. Unit 3 is the Central Discourse Unit (CDU) of the text, since all units point to it directly or indirectly. Similarly units 1 and 2 form "preparation" and "circumstance" relations relative to their nuclei. Groups of units which serve as a satellite or nucleus together are called complex discourse units, and always span a set of adjacent EDUs. ==Nuclearity in discourse==