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Hits 41 – 56 of 56

41
Diffusion of Lexical Change in Social Media ...
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42
Gender identity and lexical variation in social media ...
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43
Discovering Sociolinguistic Associations with Structured Sparsity ...
Eisenstein, Jacob; Smith, Noah A.; Xing, Eric P.. - : Carnegie Mellon University, 2011
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44
A Latent Variable Model for Geographic Lexical Variation ...
Eisenstein, Jacob; O'Connor, Brendan; Smith, Noah A.. - : Carnegie Mellon University, 2010
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45
A Latent Variable Model for Geographic Lexical Variation ...
Eisenstein, Jacob; O'Connor, Brendan; Smith, Noah A.. - : Carnegie Mellon University, 2010
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46
Discovering Demographic Language Variation ...
O'Connor, Brendan; Eisenstein, Jacob; Xing, Eric P. - : Carnegie Mellon University, 2010
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47
Discovering Demographic Language Variation ...
O'Connor, Brendan; Eisenstein, Jacob; Xing, Eric P. - : Carnegie Mellon University, 2010
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48
Part-of-Speech Tagging for Twitter: Annotation, Features, and Experiments
In: DTIC (2010)
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49
Adding More Languages Improves Unsupervised Multilingual Part-of-Speech Tagging: A Bayesian Non-Parametric Approach
In: MIT web domain (2009)
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50
Multilingual Part-of-Speech Tagging Two Unsupervised Approaches
In: JAIR (2009)
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51
Gesture in automatic discourse processing ; Structured models of gesture for discourse processing
Eisenstein, Jacob (Jacob Richard). - : Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2008
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52
Gesture in Automatic Discourse Processing
Abstract: Computers cannot fully understand spoken language without access to the wide range of modalities that accompany speech. This thesis addresses the particularly expressive modality of hand gesture, and focuses on building structured statistical models at the intersection of speech, vision, and meaning.My approach is distinguished in two key respects. First, gestural patterns are leveraged to discover parallel structures in the meaning of the associated speech. This differs from prior work that attempted to interpret individual gestures directly, an approach that was prone to a lack of generality across speakers. Second, I present novel, structured statistical models for multimodal language processing, which enable learning about gesture in its linguistic context, rather than in the abstract.These ideas find successful application in a variety of language processing tasks: resolving ambiguous noun phrases, segmenting speech into topics, and producing keyframe summaries of spoken language. In all three cases, the addition of gestural features -- extracted automatically from video -- yields significantly improved performance over a state-of-the-art text-only alternative. This marks the first demonstration that hand gesture improves automatic discourse processing.
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/41526
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53
Discourse Topic and Gestural Form
In: ACM (2008)
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54
Sylvie Gibet, Nicolas Courty, & Jean-François Kamp (Eds.): Gesture in human-computer interaction and simulation [Rezension]
In: Gesture. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 7 (2007) 1, 119-127
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55
Sylvie Gibet, Nicolas Courty, & Jean-François Kamp (Eds.) (2006). Gesture in human computer interaction and simulation.
In: Gesture. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 7 (2007) 1, 119-127
OLC Linguistik
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56
Gestural Cues for Sentence Segmentation
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