CompuTerm 2004
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See: CompuTerm Workshop, 2004, CompuTerm 2002.
References
2004
- (CompuTerm 2004 - HomePage, 2004) ⇒ http://www-test.biomath.jussieu.fr/~pz/computerm2004.html
- Computational Terminology becomes an increasingly important aspect in areas such as text mining, information retrieval, information extraction, summarisation, document management systems, question-answering systems, ontology building, etc. In text mining, the acquisition of new knowledge is best captured in terms as they denote new concepts. Terminological information is paramount to knowledge mining from texts for scientific discovery and competitive intelligence. Currently, scientific needs in emerging scientific domains, such as biomedicine, coupled with the overwhelming amount of textual data published daily, raised an additional interest to the usefulness of terminology acquired and managed systematically and automatically.
- The aim of this workshop is to bring together NLP researchers in Terminology and to discuss recent advances in computational terminology and its impact in many NLP applications. Issues like standardisation of terminological resources, constructing and updating domain specific dictionaries and thesauri, systematic terminology management will be addressed as they are a necessary component of any NLP system dealing with domain-specific literature.
- The 3rd workshop on Computational Terminology invites a range of papers on substantial, original and unpublished research on areas of computational terminology such as:
- Mining terminology (NLP techniques for the acquisition and alignment of mono-lingual and multi-lingual terminology)
- Structuring and managing terminology (term variation, term association discovery, term clustering and classification)
- Terminological integration and update of resources (linking of terminological databases, thesauri, ontologies, (semi)-automatic update of terminological resources)
- Applications of terminological information (term oriented IE, IR, QA, summarisation etc)
- Evaluation of terminology
- http://clair.si.umich.edu/clair/anthology/query.cgi?type=Conference&name=CompuTerm%20International%20Workshop%20On%20Computational%20Terminology
- (Malaise et al., 2004) ⇒ Veronique Malaise, Pierre Zweigenbaum, and Bruno Bachimont. (2004). “Detecting Semantic Relations Between Terms In Definitions.” In: International Workshop On Computational Terminology (CompuTerm 2004).