Quantitative evaluation of parsers has traditionally centered around the PARSEVAL measures of crossing brackets, (labeled) precision, and (labeled) recall. However, it is well known that these measures do not give an accurate picture of the quality of the parsers output. Furthermore, we will show that they are especially unsuited for partial parsers. In recent years, research has concentrated on dependencybased evaluation measures. We will show in this paper that such a dependency-based evaluation scheme is particularly suitable for partial parsers. TüBa-D, the treebank used here for evaluation, contains all the necessary dependency information so that the conversion of trees into a dependency structure does not have to rely on heuristics. ...
We evaluate a graph-based dependency parser on DeReKo, a large corpus of contemporary German. The de...
We evaluate two dependency parsers, MSTParser and MaltParser, with respect to their capacity to reco...
Recent studies focussed on the question whether less-congurational languages like German are harder ...
Quantitative evaluation of parsers has traditionally centered around the PARSEVAL measures of crossi...
This paper presents a thorough examination of the validity of three evaluation measures on parser ou...
Proceedings of the 16th Nordic Conference of Computational Linguistics NODALIDA-2007. Editors: Jo...
In recent years, research in parsing has extended in several new directions. One of these directions...
Proceedings of the Ninth International Workshop on Treebanks and Linguistic Theories. Editors: Mar...
A number of researchers (Lin 1995; Carroll, Briscoe, and Sanfilippo 1998; Carroll et al. 2002; Clark...
We present a study that compares data-driven dependency parsers obtained by means of annotation proj...
Proceedings of the Ninth International Workshop on Treebanks and Linguistic Theories. Editors: Mar...
The growing work in multi-lingual parsing faces the challenge of fair comparative evaluation and per...
Chunk parsing has focused on the recognition of partial constituent structures at the level of indiv...
We evaluate two dependency parsers, MSTParser and MaltParser, with respect to their capacity to reco...
The aim of this thesis is to improve Natural Language Dependency Parsing. We employ a linear Shift R...
We evaluate a graph-based dependency parser on DeReKo, a large corpus of contemporary German. The de...
We evaluate two dependency parsers, MSTParser and MaltParser, with respect to their capacity to reco...
Recent studies focussed on the question whether less-congurational languages like German are harder ...
Quantitative evaluation of parsers has traditionally centered around the PARSEVAL measures of crossi...
This paper presents a thorough examination of the validity of three evaluation measures on parser ou...
Proceedings of the 16th Nordic Conference of Computational Linguistics NODALIDA-2007. Editors: Jo...
In recent years, research in parsing has extended in several new directions. One of these directions...
Proceedings of the Ninth International Workshop on Treebanks and Linguistic Theories. Editors: Mar...
A number of researchers (Lin 1995; Carroll, Briscoe, and Sanfilippo 1998; Carroll et al. 2002; Clark...
We present a study that compares data-driven dependency parsers obtained by means of annotation proj...
Proceedings of the Ninth International Workshop on Treebanks and Linguistic Theories. Editors: Mar...
The growing work in multi-lingual parsing faces the challenge of fair comparative evaluation and per...
Chunk parsing has focused on the recognition of partial constituent structures at the level of indiv...
We evaluate two dependency parsers, MSTParser and MaltParser, with respect to their capacity to reco...
The aim of this thesis is to improve Natural Language Dependency Parsing. We employ a linear Shift R...
We evaluate a graph-based dependency parser on DeReKo, a large corpus of contemporary German. The de...
We evaluate two dependency parsers, MSTParser and MaltParser, with respect to their capacity to reco...
Recent studies focussed on the question whether less-congurational languages like German are harder ...