Performing integrated syntactic and semantic parsing using classification
HLT '90 Proceedings of the workshop on Speech and Natural Language
Expressing rhetorical relations in instructional text: a case study of the purpose relation
Computational Linguistics
A New Level of Language Generation Technology: Capabilities and Possibilities
IEEE Expert: Intelligent Systems and Their Applications
A generative perspective on verb alternations
Computational Linguistics - Special issue on natural language generation
Enabling technology for multilingual natural language generation: the KPML development environment
Natural Language Engineering
Building applied natural language generation systems
Natural Language Engineering
Automatic generation of on-line documentation in the IDAS project
ANLC '92 Proceedings of the third conference on Applied natural language processing
Integrating natural language components into graphical discourse
ANLC '92 Proceedings of the third conference on Applied natural language processing
A new view on the process of translation
EACL '89 Proceedings of the fourth conference on European chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics
Using classification to generate text
ACL '92 Proceedings of the 30th annual meeting on Association for Computational Linguistics
The Merged Upper Model: a linguistic ontology for German and English
COLING '94 Proceedings of the 15th conference on Computational linguistics - Volume 2
A fast algorithm for the generation of referring expressions
COLING '92 Proceedings of the 14th conference on Computational linguistics - Volume 1
An HPSG-based generator for German: an experiment in the reusability of linguistic resources
COLING '96 Proceedings of the 16th conference on Computational linguistics - Volume 2
Finding translation equivalents: an application of grammatical metaphor
COLING '90 Proceedings of the 13th conference on Computational linguistics - Volume 2
A Reference Architecture for Generation Systems
Natural Language Engineering
Using aggregation for selecting content when generating referring expressions
ACL '99 Proceedings of the 37th annual meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics on Computational Linguistics
Polibox: generating descriptions, comparisons, and recommendations from a database
COLING '02 Proceedings of the 19th international conference on Computational linguistics - Volume 2
Computational Linguistics
Linear order as higher-level decision: information structure in strategic and tactical generation
EWNLG '01 Proceedings of the 8th European workshop on Natural Language Generation - Volume 8
Reinterpretation of an existing NLG system in a generic generation architecture
INLG '00 Proceedings of the first international conference on Natural language generation - Volume 14
A Reference Architecture for Natural Language Generation Systems
Natural Language Engineering
Natural Language Engineering
The re-use of linguistic resources across languages in multilingual generation components
IJCAI'91 Proceedings of the 12th international joint conference on Artificial intelligence - Volume 2
Has a consensus NL generation architecture appeared, and is it psycholinguistically plausible?
INLG '94 Proceedings of the Seventh International Workshop on Natural Language Generation
A support tool for writing multilingual instructions
IJCAI'95 Proceedings of the 14th international joint conference on Artificial intelligence - Volume 2
The Chinese aspect generation based on aspect selection functions
ACL '09 Proceedings of the Joint Conference of the 47th Annual Meeting of the ACL and the 4th International Joint Conference on Natural Language Processing of the AFNLP: Volume 2 - Volume 2
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The Penman text generation system has been used within several different experimental application domains, demonstrating that it provides the basis for an adaptable general purpose text generation capability. Linking with these applications also indicated several ways that Penman's interface with applications could be improved. Penman's interface with applications is described, focusing on SPL, a newly developed sentence plan language. SPL is a notation that can be used by text planning programs to specify plans for sentences at multiple levels of abstraction and varied amounts of detail. Sentence plans are interpreted with respect to a collection of predefined knowledge sources, thereby minimizing the size and complexity of inputs that must be dynamically constructed by the application to generate individual sentences.