Constraint satisfaction in logic programming
Constraint satisfaction in logic programming
Getting the message across in RST-based text generation
Current research in natural language generation
A problem for RST: the need for multi-level discourse analysis
Computational Linguistics
Toward a synthesis of two accounts of discourse structure
Computational Linguistics
Dynamics in document design: creating text for readers
Dynamics in document design: creating text for readers
Building natural language generation systems
Building natural language generation systems
Generating Textual Diagrams and Diagrammatic Texts
CMC '98 Revised Papers from the Second International Conference on Cooperative Multimodal Communication
Customizing RST for the Automatic Production of Technical Manuals
Proceedings of the 6th International Workshop on Natural Language Generation: Aspects of Automated Natural Language Generation
Towards constructive text, diagram, and layout generation for information presentation
Computational Linguistics
Describing complex charts in natural language: a caption generation system
Computational Linguistics - Special issue on natural language generation
A representation for complex and evolving data dependencies in generation
ANLC '00 Proceedings of the sixth conference on Applied natural language processing
A fast and portable realizer for text generation systems
ANLC '97 Proceedings of the fifth conference on Applied natural language processing
Planning texts by constraint satisfaction
COLING '00 Proceedings of the 18th conference on Computational linguistics - Volume 2
From RAGS to RICHES: exploiting the potential of a flexible generation architecture
ACL '01 Proceedings of the 39th Annual Meeting on Association for Computational Linguistics
Can text structure be incompatible with rhetorical structure?
INLG '00 Proceedings of the first international conference on Natural language generation - Volume 14
Proof verbalization as an application of NLG
IJCAI'97 Proceedings of the Fifteenth international joint conference on Artifical intelligence - Volume 2
A support tool for writing multilingual instructions
IJCAI'95 Proceedings of the 14th international joint conference on Artificial intelligence - Volume 2
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
A Reference Architecture for Generation Systems
Natural Language Engineering
Optimizing Referential Coherence in Text Generation
Computational Linguistics
A Reference Architecture for Natural Language Generation Systems
Natural Language Engineering
A grammatical approach to understanding textual tables using two-dimensional SCFGs
COLING-ACL '06 Proceedings of the COLING/ACL on Main conference poster sessions
STRUCTURAL SIMILARITIES OF COMPLEX NETWORKS: A COMPUTATIONAL MODEL BY EXAMPLE OF WIKI GRAPHS
Applied Artificial Intelligence
Who Is It? Context Sensitive Named Entity and Instance Recognition by Means of Wikipedia
WI-IAT '08 Proceedings of the 2008 IEEE/WIC/ACM International Conference on Web Intelligence and Intelligent Agent Technology - Volume 01
Be Brief, And They Shall Learn: Generating Concise Language Feedback for a Computer Tutor
International Journal of Artificial Intelligence in Education
Generating basic skills reports for low-skilled readers*
Natural Language Engineering
Reading beside the lines: Using indentation to rank revisions by complexity
Science of Computer Programming
An integrated architecture for generating parenthetical constructions
HLT-SRWS '08 Proceedings of the 46th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics on Human Language Technologies: Student Research Workshop
Using linguistically motivated features for paragraph boundary identification
EMNLP '06 Proceedings of the 2006 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing
Visualising discourse structure in interactive documents
ENLG '07 Proceedings of the Eleventh European Workshop on Natural Language Generation
Making semantic topicality robust through term abstraction
DEW '09 Proceedings of the Workshop on Semantic Evaluations: Recent Achievements and Future Directions
Fast, scalable and reliable generation of controlled natural language
SETQA-NLP '08 Software Engineering, Testing, and Quality Assurance for Natural Language Processing
Parenthetical constructions: an argument against modularity
GEAF '09 Proceedings of the 2009 Workshop on Grammar Engineering Across Frameworks
INLG '08 Proceedings of the Fifth International Natural Language Generation Conference
ISWC'07/ASWC'07 Proceedings of the 6th international The semantic web and 2nd Asian conference on Asian semantic web conference
Using semantic web technology to support NLG case study: OWL finds RAGS
INLG '10 Proceedings of the 6th International Natural Language Generation Conference
Eliciting hierarchical structures from enumerative structures for ontology learning
Proceedings of the sixth international conference on Knowledge capture
Automatic verbalisation of SNOMED classes using OntoVerbal
AIME'11 Proceedings of the 13th conference on Artificial intelligence in medicine
Structure-preserving pipelines for digital libraries
LaTeCH '11 Proceedings of the 5th ACL-HLT Workshop on Language Technology for Cultural Heritage, Social Sciences, and Humanities
Towards logical hypertext structure
IICS'04 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Innovative Internet Community Systems
Controlled natural language in a game for legal assistance
CNL'10 Proceedings of the Second international conference on Controlled Natural Language
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We argue the case for abstract document structure as a separate descriptive level in the analysis and generation of written texts. The purpose of this representation is to mediate between the message of a text (i.e., its discourse structure) and its physical presentation (i.e., its organization into graphical constituents like sections, paragraphs, sentences, bulleted lists, figures, and footnotes). Abstract document structure can be seen as an extension of Nunberg's "text-grammar"; it is also closely related to "logical" markup in languages like HTML and LATEX. We show that by using this intermediate representation, several subtasks in language generation and language understanding can be defined more cleanly.