Constraint satisfaction in logic programming
Constraint satisfaction in logic programming
Generating coherent presentations employing textual and visual material
Artificial Intelligence Review - Special issue on integration of natural language and vision processing: intelligent multimedia
A representation for complex and evolving data dependencies in generation
ANLC '00 Proceedings of the sixth conference on Applied natural language processing
Two sources of control over the generation of software instructions
ACL '96 Proceedings of the 34th annual meeting on Association for Computational Linguistics
Authoring multimedia documents using WYSIWYM editing
COLING '00 Proceedings of the 18th conference on Computational linguistics - Volume 1
Can text structure be incompatible with rhetorical structure?
INLG '00 Proceedings of the first international conference on Natural language generation - Volume 14
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IJCAI'95 Proceedings of the 14th international joint conference on Artificial intelligence - Volume 2
Computational Linguistics
Proceedings of the 2010 conference on Formal Ontology in Information Systems: Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference (FOIS 2010)
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There are obvious ways in which text and diagrams within a document should be coordinated: for instance, the placement of a diagram might influence the wording of the text. However, there is a more subtle interaction between text and diagrams, which has emerged from work on generating technical documents that make extensive use of layout. Constituents that would normally be classified as textual may contain diagrammatic features (e.g., when multiple indenting is used); conversely, non-pictorial diagrams usually contain short strings of text (e.g., labels within boxes). We argue that text and diagrams really lie on a continuum, and that for generating documents of this kind we need a descriptive framework that combines linguistic and graphical features in the same representation.