Word association norms, mutual information, and lexicography
Computational Linguistics
Foundations of statistical natural language processing
Foundations of statistical natural language processing
Multiword Expressions: A Pain in the Neck for NLP
CICLing '02 Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Computational Linguistics and Intelligent Text Processing
Accurate methods for the statistics of surprise and coincidence
Computational Linguistics - Special issue on using large corpora: I
Retrieving collocations from text: Xtract
Computational Linguistics - Special issue on using large corpora: I
Termight: identifying and translating technical terminology
ANLC '94 Proceedings of the fourth conference on Applied natural language processing
Task-based evaluation of multiword expressions: a pilot study in statistical machine translation
HLT '10 Human Language Technologies: The 2010 Annual Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics
Syntax-Based Collocation Extraction
Syntax-Based Collocation Extraction
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We are in 2013, and multiword expressions have been around for a while in the computational linguistics research community. Since the first ACL workshop on MWEs 12 years ago in Sapporo, Japan, much has been discussed, proposed, experimented, evaluated and argued about MWEs. And yet, they deserve the publication of a whole special issue of the ACM Transactions on Speech and Language Processing. But what is it about multiword expressions that keeps them in fashion? Who are the people and the institutions who perform and publish groundbreaking fundamental and applied research in this field? What is the place and the relevance of our lively research community in the bigger picture of computational linguistics? Where do we come from as a community, and most importantly, where are we heading? In this introductory article, we share our point of view about the answers to these questions and introduce the articles that compose the current special issue.