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Applications of term identification technology: domain description and content characterisation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 March 1999

BRANIMIR BOGURAEV
Affiliation:
IBM T.J. Watson Research Center, IBM Corporation, NY, USA; e-mail: bkb@watson.ibm.com
CHRISTOPHER KENNEDY
Affiliation:
Department of Linguistics, Northwestern University, IL, USA; e-mail: kennedy@ling.nwu.edu

Abstract

The identification and extraction of technical terms is one of the better understood and most robust Natural Language Processing (NLP) technologies within the current state of the art of language engineering. In generic information management contexts, terms have been used primarily for procedures seeking to identify a set of phrases that is useful for tasks such as text indexing, computational lexicology, and machine-assisted translation: such tasks make important use of the assumption that terminology is representative of a given domain. This paper discusses an extension of basic terminology identification technology for the application to two higher level semantic tasks: domain description, the specification of the technical domain of a document, and content characterisation, the construction of a compact, coherent and useful representation of the topical content of a text. With these extensions, terminology identification becomes the foundation of an operational environment for document processing and content abstraction.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
1999 Cambridge University Press

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