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In this paper, we present a suite of flexible UIMA-based components for information retrieval research which have been successfully used (and re-used) in several projects in different application domains. Implementing the whole system as UIMA components is beneficial for configuration management, component reuse, implementation costs, analysis and visualization.
The thesis describes a fully automatic system for the resolution of the pronouns 'it', 'this', and 'that' in English unrestricted multi-party dialog. Referential relations considered include both normal NP-antecedence as well as discourse-deictic pronouns. The thesis contains a theoretical part with a comprehensive empiricial study, and a practical part describing machine learning experiments.
Current Natural Language Processing (NLP) systems feature high-complexity processing pipelines that require the use of components at different levels of linguistic and application specific processing. These components often have to interface with external e.g. machine learning and information retrieval libraries as well as tools for human annotation and visualization. At the UKP Lab, we are working on the Darmstadt Knowledge Processing Software Repository (DKPro) (Gurevych et al., 2007a; Müller et al., 2008) to create a highly flexible, scalable and easy-to-use toolkit that allows rapid creation of complex NLP pipelines for semantic information processing on demand. The DKPro repository consists of several main parts created to serve the purposes of different NLP application areas
In this paper we investigate the coverage of the two knowledge sources WordNet and Wikipedia for the task of bridging resolution. We report on an annotation experiment which yielded pairs of bridging anaphors and their antecedents in spoken multi-party dialog. Manual inspection of the two knowledge sources showed that, with some interesting exceptions, Wikipedia is superior to WordNet when it comes to the coverage of information necessary to resolve the bridging anaphors in our data set. We further describe a simple procedure for the automatic extraction of the required knowledge from Wikipedia by means of an API, and discuss some of the implications of the procedure’s performance.