Within the general purpose of information extraction, detection of event descriptions is often an important clue. An important characteristic of event designation in texts, and especially in media, is that it changes over time. Understanding how these designations evolve is important in information retrieval and information extraction. Our first hypothesis is that, when an event first occurs, media relate it in a very descriptive way (using verbal designations) whereas after some time, they use shorter nominal designations instead. Our second hypothesis is that the number of different nominal designations for an event tends to stabilize itself over time. In this article, we present our methodology concerning the study of the evolution of ev...
International audienceThis study lies at the interaction of a reflection on the notion of event, as ...
This article relies on information-theoretic measures to examine how events impacted the news for th...
International audienceThe literature on nominalizations often distinguishes classes of derived (deve...
In this paper we approach the question of event names in the media, which have the capacity of stock...
This paper analyzes the ways in which event names in the media help to build historic memory. We wil...
In this paper names of political events are to be depicted as “names in formation” and “names in con...
The aim of my PhD thesis is the study of nominal designations of events for automatic extraction. My...
This article provides a semantic comparison of several of the most common event nominalization proce...
We present a linguistic approach for the automatic processing of "media events" . In this paper, we ...
We present an overview of event definition and processing spanning 25 years of research in NLP. We f...
Event processing is an active area of research in the Natural Language Processing community but reso...
We present a linguistic approach for the automatic processing of "media events" . In this paper, we ...
International audienceThis paper deals with underived nouns that denote events in French (e.g. crime...
Ma thèse a pour but l'étude des désignations nominales des événements pour l'extraction automatique....
The English-language research tradition of studying media events is widely considered to have starte...
International audienceThis study lies at the interaction of a reflection on the notion of event, as ...
This article relies on information-theoretic measures to examine how events impacted the news for th...
International audienceThe literature on nominalizations often distinguishes classes of derived (deve...
In this paper we approach the question of event names in the media, which have the capacity of stock...
This paper analyzes the ways in which event names in the media help to build historic memory. We wil...
In this paper names of political events are to be depicted as “names in formation” and “names in con...
The aim of my PhD thesis is the study of nominal designations of events for automatic extraction. My...
This article provides a semantic comparison of several of the most common event nominalization proce...
We present a linguistic approach for the automatic processing of "media events" . In this paper, we ...
We present an overview of event definition and processing spanning 25 years of research in NLP. We f...
Event processing is an active area of research in the Natural Language Processing community but reso...
We present a linguistic approach for the automatic processing of "media events" . In this paper, we ...
International audienceThis paper deals with underived nouns that denote events in French (e.g. crime...
Ma thèse a pour but l'étude des désignations nominales des événements pour l'extraction automatique....
The English-language research tradition of studying media events is widely considered to have starte...
International audienceThis study lies at the interaction of a reflection on the notion of event, as ...
This article relies on information-theoretic measures to examine how events impacted the news for th...
International audienceThe literature on nominalizations often distinguishes classes of derived (deve...