Speaker: Roser Morante Senior researcher on the BIOGRAPH project led by Walter Daelemans. CLiPS-Computational Linguistics research group University of Antwerp, Date: February 23, 2010 Time: 16:00 Where: Computer Science Faculty, Meeting room (batzar aretoa) .
Modality and negation in natural language processing:
current trends and future directions
Summary: Research on modality and negation focuses on finding subjective, uncertain and counterfactual information in texts, be it in scientific papers, product reviews, or opinions in blogs. This type of +research is concerned with processing texts at the information level and aims at deep text understanding. Modality and negation are phenomena relevant for all applications that are concerned with +some form of text understanding, including text mining, sentiment analysis, recognizing textual entailment, information extraction, text summarization, and question answering. Hence, the adequate +modeling of these phenomena is of crucial importance to the natural language processing (NLP) community as a whole. Whereas from a theoretical perspective, the study of modality has a long tradition, only in the recent years have these topics attracted the attention of NLP researchers. Mainly, the development of +sentiment analysis techniques and the growing need of mining biomedical texts have been the causes for the interest in these semantic aspects of language. In this talk I will define modality and +negation from an NLP perspective, I will motivate the need for processing these phenomena, and I will summarize existing research on processing modality and negation, touching on diverse aspects +ranging from task modelling to feature visualization. Finally, I will speculate about future developments in this research area.
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