Mindnet

MindNet is the name of several automatically acquired databases of lexico-semantic relations developed by members of the Natural Language Processing Group at Microsoft Research during the 1990s.[1][2][3] The underlying technology is based on the same parser used in the Microsoft Word grammar checker and was deployed in the natural language query engine in Microsoft's Encarta 99 encyclopedia.[4]

References

  1. Montemagni, S. & L. Vanderwende (1992). "Structural Patterns vs. string patterns for extracting semantic information from dictionaries". Proceedings of COLING92: 546–552.
  2. Dolan, William B., L. Vanderwende, and S. Richardson. (1993). "Automatically Deriving Structured Knowledge Bases from On-line Dictionaries". Proceedings of the Pacific Association for Computational Linguistics.
  3. Dolan, William B., L. Vanderwende, and S. Richardson (1993). "Combining Dictionary-based and Example-based Methods for Natural Language Analysis". Proceedings of the Fifth International Conference on Theoretical and Methodological Issues in Machine Translation: 69–79.
  4. Buderi, Robert (2000). Engines of Tomorrow. Simon and Schuster. p. 358.


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