Semantic-head-driven generation
Computational Linguistics
A flexible interface for linking applications to Penman's sentence generator
HLT '89 Proceedings of the workshop on Speech and Natural Language
Using argumentation to control lexical choice: a functional unification implementation
Using argumentation to control lexical choice: a functional unification implementation
Integrating Text Planning and Linguistic Choice by Annotating Linguistic Structures
Proceedings of the 6th International Workshop on Natural Language Generation: Aspects of Automated Natural Language Generation
ANLC '92 Proceedings of the third conference on Applied natural language processing
Automatic generation of on-line documentation in the IDAS project
ANLC '92 Proceedings of the third conference on Applied natural language processing
Some methodological issues in natural language understanding research
TINLAP '75 Proceedings of the 1975 workshop on Theoretical issues in natural language processing
Conceptual and linguistic decisions in generation
ACL '84 Proceedings of the 10th International Conference on Computational Linguistics and 22nd annual meeting on Association for Computational Linguistics
Planning text for advisory dialogues
ACL '89 Proceedings of the 27th annual meeting on Association for Computational Linguistics
Using classification to generate text
ACL '92 Proceedings of the 30th annual meeting on Association for Computational Linguistics
Planning coherent multisentential text
ACL '88 Proceedings of the 26th annual meeting on Association for Computational Linguistics
Morphology and cross dependencies in the synthesis of personal pronouns in Romance languages
COLING '88 Proceedings of the 12th conference on Computational linguistics - Volume 1
A fast algorithm for the generation of referring expressions
COLING '92 Proceedings of the 14th conference on Computational linguistics - Volume 1
Demonstration of GENESYS: a very large, semantically based systemic functional generator
COLING '90 Proceedings of the 13th conference on Computational linguistics - Volume 1
Automated Assistants to Aid Humans in Understanding Team Behaviors
RoboCup-99: Robot Soccer World Cup III
The Value of Weights in Automatically Generated Text Structures
CICLing '09 Proceedings of the 10th International Conference on Computational Linguistics and Intelligent Text Processing
Automatic cinematography and multilingual NLG for generating video documentaries
Artificial Intelligence
Beyond the pipeline: discrete optimization in NLP
CONLL '05 Proceedings of the Ninth Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning
Discourse planning for information composition and delivery: A reusable platform
Natural Language Engineering
From local to global coherence: a bottom-up approach to text planning
AAAI'97/IAAI'97 Proceedings of the fourteenth national conference on artificial intelligence and ninth conference on Innovative applications of artificial intelligence
Agent-Based solutions for natural language generation tasks
CAEPIA'05 Proceedings of the 11th Spanish association conference on Current Topics in Artificial Intelligence
Generating numerical approximations
Computational Linguistics
SemScribe: automatic generation of medical reports
USAB'11 Proceedings of the 7th conference on Workgroup Human-Computer Interaction and Usability Engineering of the Austrian Computer Society: information Quality in e-Health
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I survey some recent applications-oriented NL generation systems, and claim that despite very different theoretical backgrounds, these systems have a remarkably similar architecture in terms of the modules they divide the generation process into, the computations these modules perform, and the way the modules interact with each other. I also compare this 'consensus architecture' among applied NLG systems with psycholinguistic knowledge about how humans speak, and argue that at least some aspects of the consensus architecture seem to be in agreement with what is known about human language production, despite the fact that psycholinguistic plausibility was not in general a goal of the developers of the surveyed systems.