Sandbox
From the LDC Language Resource Wiki
The Sandbox is a place to play. Use this page for practicing wiki editing, making links, anything! Don't expect anything you put here to last.
- Learn how to manipulate the Wiki.
- What Can I Do?
- I can make things bold ('''bold''').
- I can italicize (''italicize'').
- I can timestamp and sign: Mamandel 14:52, 22 April 2010 (UTC) (four tildes: ~~~~)
- or just timestamp: 14:52, 22 April 2010 (UTC) (five tildes: ~~~~~)
- or just sign: Mamandel (three tildes: ~~~)
- I can make an external link ([http://ldc.upenn.edu external link] -- space between URL and text).
- I can make an internal link ([[Bengali/Bengali|internal link]] -- pipe character '|' between page title and text).
- What Can I Do?
I can make text preformatted and in a box (note, no auto-wrapping). (White space at beginning of line).
Some magic words and what they produce:
- {{SERVER}}: http://lrwiki.ldc.upenn.edu
- {{PAGENAME}}: Sandbox
For much, much more info see Mediawiki's editing help.
FEEL FREE TO DELETE ANYTHING BELOW THE DOUBLE LINE,
BUT DON'T TOUCH THE DOUBLE LINE OR ANYTHING ABOVE IT. THANKS.
-- The Mgt.
WELCOME TO THE SANDBOX
Contents |
UNDER CONSTRUCTION
[Mamandel 20:19, 10 May 2011 (UTC)]
This page is for language-independent resources for computational natural language processing.
Language-independent General Meta-resources that are not specific to NLP have their own page.
Software
- An Crúbadán: Corpus building for minority languages. Web crawling software “designed to exploit the vast quantities of text freely available on the web as a way of bringing the benefits of statistical NLP to languages with small numbers of speakers and/or limited computational resources.” Kevin P. Scannell. [Mamandel 00:25, 14 May 2010 (UTC)]
- Apertium. A free/open-source rule-based machine translation platform offering free linguistic data (morphological analysers, bilingual dictionaries, etc.) in XML formats for a range of languages.
- Foma: a finite-state compiler and library. Hulden, Mans. 2009. Proceedings of the EACL 2009 Demonstrations Session, pages 29–32, Athens, Greece, 3 April 2009. PDF
- Helsinki Finite-State Transducer Technology (HFST). A free/open-source rewrite of the Xerox finite-state tools. It provides an implementation both of the
lexc
andtwolc
formalisms.
- Universal Networking Language (UNL). “an artificial language for representing, describing, summarizing, refining, storing and disseminating information in a natural-language-independent format. It is a kind of mark-up language which represents not the formatting but the core information of a text. As HTML annotations can be realized differently in the context of different applications, machines, displays, etc., so UNL expressions can have different realizations in different human languages.”
- VISL Constraint Grammar. A free/open-source software reimplementation and extension of Fred Karlsson's Constraint Grammar formalism.
NLP Literature
- Machine Translation Archive. Electronic repository and bibliography of articles, books and papers on topics in machine translation, computer translation systems, and computer-based translation tools. >6400 items. Aims to be comprehensive on English-language publications since 1990; adding earlier papers and books to provide partial coverage from the 1950s.
- Probabilistic tagging of minority language data: a case study using Qtag. Christopher Cox. 2010. In Corpus-linguistic applications, ed. Stefan Th. Gries, Stefanie Wulff, and Mark Davies. 2010. Electronic: ISBN 9789042028012; hardback: ISBN 9789042028005. Reviewed in LINGUIST List 21.3318 (2010-08-17) by Andrew Caines.
- OBELEX: Online Bibliography of Electronic Lexicography. “Articles, monographs, anthologies, and reviews from the field of electronic lexicography with a special focus on online lexicography.” Dictionaries not included, but included in a supplementary database now under construction. Search by full text, keyword, person, analysed languages, or publication year. “c. 600 entries” (German home page) [Mamandel 21:29, 10 May 2011 (UTC)]