Recent years have seen an increasing interest in developing standards for linguistic annotation, with a focus on the interoperability of the resources. This effort, however, requires a profound knowledge of the advantages and disadvantages of linguistic annotation schemes in order to avoid importing the flaws and weaknesses of existing encoding schemes into the new standards. This paper addresses the question how to compare syntactically annotated corpora and gain insights into the usefulness of specific design decisions. We present an exhaustive evaluation of two German treebanks with crucially different encoding schemes. We evaluate three different parsers trained on the two treebanks and compare results using EVALB, the Leaf-Ancestor met...
This paper is a contribution to the ongoing discussion on treebank annotation schemes and their impa...
This paper is a contribution to the ongoing discussion on treebank annotation schemes and their impa...
This paper is a contribution to the ongoing discussion on treebank annotation schemes and their impa...
Recent years have seen an increasing interest in developing standards for linguistic annotation, wit...
Recent years have seen an increasing interest in developing standards for linguistic annotation, wit...
Recent years have seen an increasing interest in developing standards for linguistic annotation, wit...
Recent years have seen an increasing interest in developing standards for linguistic annotation, wit...
In the last decade, the Penn treebank has become the standard data set for evaluating parsers. The f...
Traditionally, parsers are evaluated against gold standard test data. This can cause problems if the...
Recent studies focussed on the question whether less-congurational languages like German are harder ...
Traditionally, parsers are evaluated against gold standard test data. This can cause problems if th...
Recent studies focussed on the question whether less-congurational languages like German are harder ...
Recent studies focussed on the question whether less-congurational languages like German are harder ...
Traditionally, parsers are evaluated against gold standard test data. This can cause problems if th...
Traditionally, parsers are evaluated against gold standard test data. This can cause\ud problems if ...
This paper is a contribution to the ongoing discussion on treebank annotation schemes and their impa...
This paper is a contribution to the ongoing discussion on treebank annotation schemes and their impa...
This paper is a contribution to the ongoing discussion on treebank annotation schemes and their impa...
Recent years have seen an increasing interest in developing standards for linguistic annotation, wit...
Recent years have seen an increasing interest in developing standards for linguistic annotation, wit...
Recent years have seen an increasing interest in developing standards for linguistic annotation, wit...
Recent years have seen an increasing interest in developing standards for linguistic annotation, wit...
In the last decade, the Penn treebank has become the standard data set for evaluating parsers. The f...
Traditionally, parsers are evaluated against gold standard test data. This can cause problems if the...
Recent studies focussed on the question whether less-congurational languages like German are harder ...
Traditionally, parsers are evaluated against gold standard test data. This can cause problems if th...
Recent studies focussed on the question whether less-congurational languages like German are harder ...
Recent studies focussed on the question whether less-congurational languages like German are harder ...
Traditionally, parsers are evaluated against gold standard test data. This can cause problems if th...
Traditionally, parsers are evaluated against gold standard test data. This can cause\ud problems if ...
This paper is a contribution to the ongoing discussion on treebank annotation schemes and their impa...
This paper is a contribution to the ongoing discussion on treebank annotation schemes and their impa...
This paper is a contribution to the ongoing discussion on treebank annotation schemes and their impa...