| Robert Dale, Hermann Moisl, and Harold Somers (2000). "Handbook of natural language processing", Imprint New York: Marcel Dekker. |
....2 Natural Language Processing For the sake of brevity, we will describe in this Section only the logical sequence of processing steps during natural language analysis for our query interface. We refer the reader who is interested in more general aspects of natural language information systems to [1, 4, 6, 7]. For a more thorough technical description of our query interface, we refer to [2] When a query is sent to the natural language processing module, in a first step, the language of the query has to be identified. Currently we support German and English, but the system has been designed to allow ....
R. Dale, H. Moisl, and H. Somers, editors. Handbook of Natural Language Processing. Marcel Dekker, New York, NY, 2000.
.... have been intensively studied by several research groups (e.g. Germann01, Och02] Some other researchers also invented word level alignment techniques for noisy parallel texts (e.g. Melamed97] Detailed introductory descriptions regarding issues mentioned in this section can be found in [Manning99, Wu00]. One of well studied techniques of learning translation knowledge such as translation probabilities from parallel text is the one based on statistical machine translation models [Brown90, Brown93] Another well studied techniques of estimating correspondences of words and compound terms across ....
Wu, D.: Alignment, Dale, R., Moisl, H. and Somers, H. (eds.), Handbook of Natural Language Processing, chapter 18, pp. 415 458, Marcel Dekker Inc. (2000).
.... has been considered in the literature on literary analysis, primarily for the purpose of attribution of classic works of disputed authorship (see the surveys by Holmes (1995) and, more recently McEnery (1998) Some work has also been carried out in the area of forensics (Bailey, 1979; McMenamin, 1993). Virtually all the early work on the authorship attribution problem focused on attempts to isolate discriminators, that is, individual stylistic features which are largely invariant over different passages writen by a given author, but which vary from author to author. Many types of ....
In R. Dale, H. Moisl, and H. Somers, editors, Handbook of Natural Language Processing. forthcoming. G. McMenamin. 1993. Forensic Stylistics. Elsevier.
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Dale, R; Moisl, H; and Somers, H #eds#. #2000#, Handbook of Natural Language Processing, Marcel Dekker, New York.
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Robert Dale, Hermann Moisl, and Harold Somers (2000). "Handbook of natural language processing", Imprint New York: Marcel Dekker.
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Dale, R.; Moisl, H.; Somers, H. (Eds.), (2000): Handbook of Natural Language Processing. Marcel Dekker, Inc., New York, NY.
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R. Dale, H. Moisl, and H. Somers (Eds.), "A Handbook of Natural Language Processing," Marcel Dekker Inc., 2000.
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Dale, R., Moisl, H. and Somers, H. (eds.) (2000) Handbook of Natural Language Processing. Marcel Dekker.
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Dale, Robert, Hermann Moisle, and Harold Somers, eds. 2000. Handbook of Natural Language Processing. Marcel Dekker Inc.
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