Distilling and exploring nuggets from a corpus
SIGIR '12 Proceedings of the 35th international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in information retrieval
HyTER: meaning-equivalent semantics for translation evaluation
NAACL HLT '12 Proceedings of the 2012 Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies
Encouraging consistent translation choices
NAACL HLT '12 Proceedings of the 2012 Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies
Combining quality prediction and system selection for improved automatic translation output
WMT '12 Proceedings of the Seventh Workshop on Statistical Machine Translation
Cross-language hybrid keyword and semantic search
ER'12 Proceedings of the 31st international conference on Conceptual Modeling
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Cross-lingual web spam classification
Proceedings of the 22nd international conference on World Wide Web companion
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This comprehensive handbook, written by leading experts in the field, details the groundbreaking research conducted under the breakthrough GALE program--The Global Autonomous Language Exploitation within the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), while placing it in the context of previous research in the fields of natural language and signal processing, artificial intelligence and machine translation.The most fundamental contrast between GALE and its predecessor programs was its holistic integration of previously separate or sequential processes. In earlier language research programs, each of the individual processes was performed separately and sequentially: speech recognition, language recognition, transcription, translation, and content summarization. The GALE program employed a distinctly new approach by executing these processes simultaneously. Speech and language recognition algorithms now aid translation and transcription processes and vice versa. This combination of previously distinct processes has produced significant research and performance breakthroughs and has fundamentally changed the natural language processing and machine translation fields.This comprehensive handbook provides an exhaustive exploration into these latest technologies in natural language, speech and signal processing, and machine translation, providing researchers, practitioners and students with an authoritative reference on the topic.