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MassiveSumm: a very large-scale, very multilingual, news summarisation dataset ...
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IAPUCP at SemEval-2021 task 1: Stacking fine-tuned transformers is almost all you need for lexical complexity prediction
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Predicting Declension Class from Form and Meaning
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In: Proceedings of the 58th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (2020)
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Abstract:
The noun lexica of many natural languages are divided into several declension classes with characteristic morphological properties. Class membership is far from deterministic, but the phonological form of a noun and/or its meaning can often provide imperfect clues. Here, we investigate the strength of those clues. More specifically, we operationalize this by measuring how much information, in bits, we can glean about declension class from knowing the form and/or meaning of nouns. We know that form and meaning are often also indicative of grammatical gender—which, as we quantitatively verify, can itself share information with declension class—so we also control for gender. We find for two Indo-European languages (Czech and German) that form and meaning respectively share significant amounts of information with class (and contribute additional information above and beyond gender). The three-way interaction between class, form, and meaning (given gender) is also significant. Our study is important for two reasons: First, we introduce a new method that provides additional quantitative support for a classic linguistic finding that form and meaning are relevant for the classification of nouns into declensions. Secondly, we show not only that individual declensions classes vary in the strength of their clues within a language, but also that these variations themselves vary across languages.
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URL: https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000462306 https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11850/462306
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The Paradigm Discovery Problem
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In: Proceedings of the 58th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (2020)
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A Tale of a Probe and a Parser
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In: Proceedings of the 58th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (2020)
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A Corpus for Large-Scale Phonetic Typology
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In: Proceedings of the 58th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (2020)
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Information-Theoretic Probing for Linguistic Structure
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In: Proceedings of the 58th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (2020)
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It’s Easier to Translate out of English than into it: Measuring Neural Translation Difficulty by Cross-Mutual Information
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In: Proceedings of the 58th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (2020)
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ASSET: A dataset for tuning and evaluation of sentence simplification models with multiple rewriting transformations
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Non-linear instance-based cross-lingual mapping for non-isomorphic embedding spaces
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Classification-based self-learning for weakly supervised bilingual lexicon induction
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On the limitations of cross-lingual encoders as exposed by reference-free machine translation evaluation
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Multilingual Projection for Parsing Truly Low-Resource Languageš
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In: EISSN: 2307-387X ; Transactions of the Association for Computational Linguistics ; https://hal.inria.fr/hal-01426754 ; Transactions of the Association for Computational Linguistics, The MIT Press, 2016 (2016)
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Treebank-Based Deep Grammar Acquisition for French Probabilistic Parsing Resources
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Schluter, Natalie. - : Dublin City University. National Centre for Language Technology (NCLT), 2011. : Dublin City University. School of Computing, 2011
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In: Schluter, Natalie (2011) Treebank-Based Deep Grammar Acquisition for French Probabilistic Parsing Resources. PhD thesis, Dublin City University. (2011)
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Dependency parsing resources for French: Converting acquired lexical functional grammar F-Structure annotations and parsing F-Structures directly
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In: Schluter, Natalie and van Genabith, Josef orcid:0000-0003-1322-7944 (2009) Dependency parsing resources for French: Converting acquired lexical functional grammar F-Structure annotations and parsing F-Structures directly. In: Nodalida 2009 Conference, 14 - 16 May 2009, Odense, Denmark. (2009)
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Treebank-based acquisition of LFG parsing resources for French
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In: Schluter, Natalie and van Genabith, Josef (2008) Treebank-based acquisition of LFG parsing resources for French. In: the Sixth International Language Resources and Evaluation Conference (LREC'08), May 28-30, 2008, Marrakech, Morocco. (2008)
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