Natural Language Processing

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By Language Linguistics Collections of Links Multilingual Resources Conferences Online Communities

Linguistic ressources

http://www.ilovelanguages.com/index.php?category=Languages

Resources for Text, Speech and Language Processing

http://www.cs.technion.ac.il/~gabr/resources/resources.html This is a collection of resources in a variety of fields related to text, speech and language processing . These include computational linguistics, information retrieval and machine learning. Here you can find pointers to useful Web sites, as well as lists of relevant books, newsgroups and mailing lists, and much more.
Outils NLP

NLP Introduction

Analyse des contenus & sémantisation

NLP Associations

http://www.aclweb.org/aclwiki/index.php?title=List_of_NLP/CL_courses From ACLWiki This page lists university courses that contain substantial content in Natural Language Processing and Computational Linguistics , and is derived from a survey sponsored by the Association for Computational Linguistics . Courses are categorized by level (undergraduate, graduate, or both) and programming language.

List of NLP/CL courses - ACLWiki

Graduates and students advised by our professors are citizens of 10 countries Since 1996, the Laboratory conducts research in Natural Language Processing and Computational Linguistics. The research group, led by A. Gelbukh , includes the researchers G. http://nlp.cic.ipn.mx/

Natural Language Laboratory of CIC-IPN

Le CINES (Centre Informatique National de l’Enseignement Supérieur), acteur majeur de l’archivage électronique en France, vient de mettre à jour le Contenu de sa rubrique “ Archivage numérique pérenne “. “ L’Internet des objets : définitions, grands projets et politique japonaise “. Ce document est le produit d’un travail de recherche, d’analyse et de synthèse, mené à Tokyo de juin à septembre 2010, par un élève-ingénieur de l’Institut National des Sciences Appliquées (INSA) de Lyon, dans le cadre d’un stage au sein du Service pour la Science et la Technologie de l’Ambassade de France. Understanding Shakespeare visualizes entire plays by Shakespeare in 5 different ways, by showing its entire texts translated as a collection of the most frequently used words for each character. The goal of this approach was to provide an overview of the entire play by showing its text through a collection of the most frequently used words for each character. http://tal.univ-paris3.fr/blogtal/

(pluri)TAL / ILPGA [U. Paris 3]

http://www.gelbukh.com/clbook/

COMPUTATIONAL LINGUISTICS: Models, Resources, Applications

Abstract : Can computers meaningfully process human language? If this is difficult, why? If this is possible, how? This book introduces the reader to the fascinating science of computational linguistics and automatic natural language processing, which combines linguistics and artificial intelligence. The main part of the book is devoted to the explanation of the inner working of a linguistic processor, a software module in charge of translating natural language input into a representation directly usable by traditional artificial intelligence applications and, vice versa, of translating their answer into human language. Overall emphasis in the book is made on a well-elaborated, though—for a number of historical reasons—so far little-known in the literature computational linguistic model called Meaning-Text Theory.

The Mendicant Bug

http://mendicantbug.com/ I just tried my first mulled beer: BFM La Dragonne . While the weather is not quite appropriate yet, it is just beginning to get cool here in Atlanta. I heated it to about 55 degrees C and enjoyed it in a wine glass, though perhaps a tumbler would have been better. Also while the beer is labeled at 7%, someone scratched it out and wrote 4% by hand. Not sure what that’s about.
Since I started blogging almost a year and a half ago, I have been following many blogs. I managed to find some blogs dealing with computational linguistics and natural language processing, but they were few and far between. Since then, I’ve discovered quite a few NLP people that have entered the blagoblag. Here is a non-exhaustive list of the many that I follow. Many of these bloggers post sporadically and even then only post about CL/NLP occasionally. I’ve tried to organize the list into those who post exclusively on CL/NLP (at least as far as I have followed them) and those who post sporadically on CL/NLP.

Computational Linguistics Blogs « The Mendicant Bug

http://mendicantbug.com/2009/01/24/computational-linguistics-blogs/