43,515 research outputs found
Memory-Based Shallow Parsing
We present memory-based learning approaches to shallow parsing and apply
these to five tasks: base noun phrase identification, arbitrary base phrase
recognition, clause detection, noun phrase parsing and full parsing. We use
feature selection techniques and system combination methods for improving the
performance of the memory-based learner. Our approach is evaluated on standard
data sets and the results are compared with that of other systems. This reveals
that our approach works well for base phrase identification while its
application towards recognizing embedded structures leaves some room for
improvement
Introduction to the CoNLL-2000 Shared Task: Chunking
We describe the CoNLL-2000 shared task: dividing text into syntactically
related non-overlapping groups of words, so-called text chunking. We give
background information on the data sets, present a general overview of the
systems that have taken part in the shared task and briefly discuss their
performance.Comment: 6 page
Phrase-based Image Captioning
Generating a novel textual description of an image is an interesting problem
that connects computer vision and natural language processing. In this paper,
we present a simple model that is able to generate descriptive sentences given
a sample image. This model has a strong focus on the syntax of the
descriptions. We train a purely bilinear model that learns a metric between an
image representation (generated from a previously trained Convolutional Neural
Network) and phrases that are used to described them. The system is then able
to infer phrases from a given image sample. Based on caption syntax statistics,
we propose a simple language model that can produce relevant descriptions for a
given test image using the phrases inferred. Our approach, which is
considerably simpler than state-of-the-art models, achieves comparable results
in two popular datasets for the task: Flickr30k and the recently proposed
Microsoft COCO
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Automated recognition and post-coordination of complex clinical terms
One of the key tasks in integrating guideline-based decision support systems with the electronic patient record is the mapping of clinical terms contained in both guidelines and patient notes to a common, controlled terminology. However, a vocabulary of pre-coordinated terms cannot cover every possible variation - clinical terms are often highly compositional and complex. We present a rule-based approach for automated recognition and post-coordination of clinical terms using minimal, morpheme-based thesauri, neoclassical combining forms and part-of-speech analysis. The process integrates MetaMap with the open-source GATE framework
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