Empirically designing and evaluating a new revision-based model for summary generation
Artificial Intelligence - Special volume on empirical methods
Architectures for Natural Language Generation: Problems and Perspectives
EWNLG '93 Selected papers from the Fourth European Workshop on Trends in Natural Language Generation, An Artificial Intelligence Perspective
Controlling Content Realization with Functional Unification Grammars
Proceedings of the 6th International Workshop on Natural Language Generation: Aspects of Automated Natural Language Generation
Integrating Text Planning and Linguistic Choice by Annotating Linguistic Structures
Proceedings of the 6th International Workshop on Natural Language Generation: Aspects of Automated Natural Language Generation
Pipelines and size constraints
Computational Linguistics
Natural language question answering: the view from here
Natural Language Engineering
ILEX: an architecture for a dynamic hypertext generation system
Natural Language Engineering
A representation for complex and evolving data dependencies in generation
ANLC '00 Proceedings of the sixth conference on Applied natural language processing
Enabling technology for multilingual natural language generation: the KPML development environment
Natural Language Engineering
A fast and portable realizer for text generation systems
ANLC '97 Proceedings of the fifth conference on Applied natural language processing
Conceptual and linguistic decisions in generation
ACL '84 Proceedings of the 10th International Conference on Computational Linguistics and 22nd annual meeting on Association for Computational Linguistics
Generation that exploits corpus-based statistical knowledge
COLING '98 Proceedings of the 17th international conference on Computational linguistics - Volume 1
Planning texts by constraint satisfaction
COLING '00 Proceedings of the 18th conference on Computational linguistics - Volume 2
GATE: a General Architecture for Text Engineering
COLING '96 Proceedings of the 16th conference on Computational linguistics - Volume 2
International standard for a linguistic annotation framework
Natural Language Engineering
A Reference Architecture for Generation Systems
Natural Language Engineering
Large-scale software integration for spoken language and multimodal dialog systems
Natural Language Engineering
The generic information extraction system
MUC5 '93 Proceedings of the 5th conference on Message understanding
Dialogue interaction with the DARPA communicator infrastructure: the development of useful software
HLT '01 Proceedings of the first international conference on Human language technology research
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
Corpus-based NP modifier generation
NAACL '01 Proceedings of the second meeting of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics on Language technologies
Cascading XSL filters for content selection in multilingual document generation
NLPXML '02 Proceedings of the 2nd workshop on NLP and XML - Volume 17
Robust translation of spontaneous speech: a multi-engine approach
IJCAI'01 Proceedings of the 17th international joint conference on Artificial intelligence - Volume 2
Software Architecture for Language Engineering
Natural Language Engineering
A Reference Architecture for Natural Language Generation Systems
Natural Language Engineering
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Generic software architectures aim to support re-use of components, focusing of research and development effort, and evaluation and comparison of approaches. In the field of natural language processing, generic frameworks for understanding have been successfully deployed to meet all of these aims, but nothing comparable yet exists for generation. The nature of the task itself, and the current methodologies available to research it, seem to make it more difficult to reach the necessary level of consensus to support generic proposals. Recent work has made progress towards establishing a generic framework for generation at the functional level, but left open the issue of actual implementation. In this paper, we discuss the requirements for such an implementation layer for generation systems, drawing on two initial attempts to implement it. We argue that it is possible and useful to distinguish “functional architecture” from “implementation architecture” for generation systems.