5 research outputs found

    Overview of the 2005 cross-language image retrieval track (ImageCLEF)

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    The purpose of this paper is to outline efforts from the 2005 CLEF crosslanguage image retrieval campaign (ImageCLEF). The aim of this CLEF track is to explore the use of both text and content-based retrieval methods for cross-language image retrieval. Four tasks were offered in the ImageCLEF track: a ad-hoc retrieval from an historic photographic collection, ad-hoc retrieval from a medical collection, an automatic image annotation task, and a user-centered (interactive) evaluation task that is explained in the iCLEF summary. 24 research groups from a variety of backgrounds and nationalities (14 countries) participated in ImageCLEF. In this paper we describe the ImageCLEF tasks, submissions from participating groups and summarise the main fndings

    Research in Linguistic Engineering: Resources and Tools

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    In this paper we are revisiting some of the resources and tools developed by the members of the Intelligent Systems Research Group (GSI) at UPM as well as from the Information Retrieval and Natural Language Processing Research Group (IR&NLP) at UNED. Details about developed resources (corpus, software) and current interests and projects are given for the two groups. It is also included a brief summary and links into open source resources and tools developed by other groups of the MAVIR consortium

    UNED at PASCAL RTE-2 challenge

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    This paper reports the description of the developed system and the results obtained in the participation of the UNED in the Second Recognizing Textual Entailment (RTE) Challenge. New techniques and tools have been added: enriched queries to WordNet, detection of numeric expressions and their entailment, and Support Vector Machine classi cation (SVM) are the more relevant. The accuracy performed is slightly higher than the one from the previous edition system

    Geographic information extraction from texts

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    A large volume of unstructured texts, containing valuable geographic information, is available online. This information – provided implicitly or explicitly – is useful not only for scientific studies (e.g., spatial humanities) but also for many practical applications (e.g., geographic information retrieval). Although large progress has been achieved in geographic information extraction from texts, there are still unsolved challenges and issues, ranging from methods, systems, and data, to applications and privacy. Therefore, this workshop will provide a timely opportunity to discuss the recent advances, new ideas, and concepts but also identify research gaps in geographic information extraction
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