The availability of large on-line text corpora provides a natural and
promising bridge between the worlds of natural language processing (NLP) and
machine learning (ML). In recent years, the NLP community has been aggressively
investigating statistical techniques to drive part-of-speech taggers, but
application-specific text corpora can be used to drive knowledge acquisition at
much higher levels as well. In this paper we will show how ML techniques can be
used to support knowledge acquisition for information extraction systems. It is
often very difficult to specify an explicit domain model for many information
extraction applications, and it is always labor intensive to implement
hand-coded heuristics for each new domain. We have discovered that it is
nevertheless possible to use ML algorithms in order to capture knowledge that
is only implicitly present in a representative text corpus. Our work addresses
issues traditionally associated with discourse analysis and intersentential
inference generation, and demonstrates the utility of ML algorithms at this
higher level of language analysis. The benefits of our work address the
portability and scalability of information extraction (IE) technologies. When
hand-coded heuristics are used to manage discourse analysis in an information
extraction system, months of programming effort are easily needed to port a
successful IE system to a new domain. We will show how ML algorithms can reduce
thisComment: 6 pages, AAAI-9