Papers for Relevance Assessment by Patrick Sturt

Research Question: Do corpora show a statistical bias towards closely located phrases having parallel syntactic structure?

Paper ID
(Link to PDF)

Title

Author(s)

P99-1007

Unifying Parallels

Claire Garde

W96-0211

Automating Feature Set Selection for Case-Based Learning of Linguistic Knowledge

Claire Cardie

W00-1315

Empirical Term Weighting and Expansion Frequency

Kyoji Umemura; Kenneth W. Church

W03-0427

Memory-based one-step named-entity recognition: Effects of seed list features, classifier stacking, and unannotated data

Iris Hendrickx; Antal van den Bosch

93_Paper

Improved Machine Translation Performance via Parallel Sentence Extraction from Comparable Corpora

Dragos Stefan Munteanu, Alexander Fraser and Daniel Marcu

A97-2001

Syntactic Structures of Sentences from Large Corpora

Emmanuel Giguet; Jacques Vergne

W90-0103

A Connectionist Treatment of Grammar for Generation: Relying on Emergents

Nigel Ward

H01-1010

Automatic Predicate Argument Analysis of the Penn TreeBank

M. Palmer; J. Rosenzweig; S. Cotton

C90-3056

SYNTACTIC DESCRIPTION OF FREE WORD ORDER LANGUAGES

Tania Avgustinova; Karel Oliva

J93-1001

Introduction to the Special Issue on Computational Linguistics Using Large Corpora

Kenneth W. Church; Robert L. Mercert

P86-1031

A PROPERTY-SHARING CONSTRAINT IN CENTERING

Megumi Kameyama

E89-1035

THE SYNTACTIC REGULARITY OF ENGLISH NOUN PHRASES

Lita Taylor; Claire Grover; Ted Briseoe

P99-1022

Dynamic Nonlocal Language Modeling via Hierarchical Topic-Based Adaptation

Radu Florian; David Yarowsky

E03-1050

Using Noisy Biligual Data for Statistical Machine Translation

Stephan Vogel

C00-1045

Pronominalization revisited

Renate Henschel; Hua Cheng; Massimo Poesio