Natural Language Information Processing: A Computer Grammmar of English and Its Applications
Natural Language Information Processing: A Computer Grammmar of English and Its Applications
On the need for parsing ill-formed input
Computational Linguistics
Isolating domain dependencies in natural language interfaces
ANLC '83 Proceedings of the first conference on Applied natural language processing
Utilizing domain-specific information for processing compact text
ANLC '83 Proceedings of the first conference on Applied natural language processing
Automated determination of sublanguage syntactic usage
ACL '84 Proceedings of the 10th International Conference on Computational Linguistics and 22nd annual meeting on Association for Computational Linguistics
Constraints on noun phrase conjunction: a domain-independent mechanism
COLING '82 Proceedings of the 9th conference on Computational linguistics - Volume 2
Analysis and processing of compact text
COLING '82 Proceedings of the 9th conference on Computational linguistics - Volume 1
Transporting the linguistic string project system from a medical to a Navy domain
ACM Transactions on Information Systems (TOIS)
Communications of the ACM
The paraphrase search assistant: terminological feedback for iterative information seeking
Proceedings of the 22nd annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in information retrieval
The disambiguation of nominalizations
Computational Linguistics
Compansion: From research prototype to practical integration
Natural Language Engineering
Interpretation of nominal compounds: combining domain-independent and domain-specific information
COLING '96 Proceedings of the 16th conference on Computational linguistics - Volume 1
A comparison of parsing technologies for the biomedical domain
Natural Language Engineering
Detecting novel compounds: the role of distributional evidence
EACL '03 Proceedings of the tenth conference on European chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics - Volume 1
Semitic '05 Proceedings of the ACL Workshop on Computational Approaches to Semitic Languages
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Methods of text compression in Navy messages are not limited to sentence fragments and the omissions of function words such as the copula be. Text compression is also exhibited within "grammatical" sentences and is identified within noun phrases in Navy messages. Mechanisms of text compression include increased frequency of complex noun sequences and also increased usage of nominalizations. Semantic relationships among elements of a complex noun sequence can be used to derive a correct bracketing of syntactic constructions.