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<volume id="W11">
  <paper id="0700">
    <title>Proceedings of the Workshop on Language in Social Media (LSM 2011)</title>
    <editor><first>Meenakshi</first><last>Nagarajan</last></editor>
    <editor><first>Michael</first><last>Gamon</last></editor>
    <month>June</month>
    <year>2011</year>
    <address>Portland, Oregon</address>
    <publisher>Association for Computational Linguistics</publisher>
    <url>http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/W11-07</url>
    <bibtype>book</bibtype>
    <bibkey>LSM:2011</bibkey>
  </paper>

  <paper id="0701">
    <title>Automating Analysis of Social Media Communication: Insights from CMDA</title>
    <author><first>Susan</first><last>Herring</last></author>
    <booktitle>Proceedings of the Workshop on Language in Social Media (LSM 2011)</booktitle>
    <month>June</month>
    <year>2011</year>
    <address>Portland, Oregon</address>
    <publisher>Association for Computational Linguistics</publisher>
    <pages>1</pages>
    <url>http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/W11-0701</url>
    <bibtype>inproceedings</bibtype>
    <bibkey>herring:2011:LSM</bibkey>
  </paper>

  <paper id="0702">
    <title>How can you say such things?!?: Recognizing Disagreement in Informal Political Argument</title>
    <author><first>Rob</first><last>Abbott</last></author>
    <author><first>Marilyn</first><last>Walker</last></author>
    <author><first>Pranav</first><last>Anand</last></author>
    <author><first>Jean E.</first><last>Fox Tree</last></author>
    <author><first>Robeson</first><last>Bowmani</last></author>
    <author><first>Joseph</first><last>King</last></author>
    <booktitle>Proceedings of the Workshop on Language in Social Media (LSM 2011)</booktitle>
    <month>June</month>
    <year>2011</year>
    <address>Portland, Oregon</address>
    <publisher>Association for Computational Linguistics</publisher>
    <pages>2&#8211;11</pages>
    <url>http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/W11-0702</url>
    <bibtype>inproceedings</bibtype>
    <bibkey>abbott-EtAl:2011:LSM</bibkey>
  </paper>

  <paper id="0703">
    <title>What pushes their buttons? Predicting comment polarity from the content of political blog posts</title>
    <author><first>Ramnath</first><last>Balasubramanyan</last></author>
    <author><first>William W.</first><last>Cohen</last></author>
    <author><first>Doug</first><last>Pierce</last></author>
    <author><first>David P.</first><last>Redlawsk</last></author>
    <booktitle>Proceedings of the Workshop on Language in Social Media (LSM 2011)</booktitle>
    <month>June</month>
    <year>2011</year>
    <address>Portland, Oregon</address>
    <publisher>Association for Computational Linguistics</publisher>
    <pages>12&#8211;19</pages>
    <url>http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/W11-0703</url>
    <bibtype>inproceedings</bibtype>
    <bibkey>balasubramanyan-EtAl:2011:LSM</bibkey>
  </paper>

  <paper id="0704">
    <title>Contextual Bearing on Linguistic Variation in Social Media</title>
    <author><first>Stephan</first><last>Gouws</last></author>
    <author><first>Donald</first><last>Metzler</last></author>
    <author><first>Congxing</first><last>Cai</last></author>
    <author><first>Eduard</first><last>Hovy</last></author>
    <booktitle>Proceedings of the Workshop on Language in Social Media (LSM 2011)</booktitle>
    <month>June</month>
    <year>2011</year>
    <address>Portland, Oregon</address>
    <publisher>Association for Computational Linguistics</publisher>
    <pages>20&#8211;29</pages>
    <url>http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/W11-0704</url>
    <bibtype>inproceedings</bibtype>
    <bibkey>gouws-EtAl:2011:LSM</bibkey>
  </paper>

  <paper id="0705">
    <title>Sentiment Analysis of Twitter Data</title>
    <author><first>Apoorv</first><last>Agarwal</last></author>
    <author><first>Boyi</first><last>Xie</last></author>
    <author><first>Ilia</first><last>Vovsha</last></author>
    <author><first>Owen</first><last>Rambow</last></author>
    <author><first>Rebecca</first><last>Passonneau</last></author>
    <booktitle>Proceedings of the Workshop on Language in Social Media (LSM 2011)</booktitle>
    <month>June</month>
    <year>2011</year>
    <address>Portland, Oregon</address>
    <publisher>Association for Computational Linguistics</publisher>
    <pages>30&#8211;38</pages>
    <url>http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/W11-0705</url>
    <bibtype>inproceedings</bibtype>
    <bibkey>agarwal-EtAl:2011:LSM</bibkey>
  </paper>

  <paper id="0706">
    <title>Detecting Forum Authority Claims in Online Discussions</title>
    <author><first>Alex</first><last>Marin</last></author>
    <author><first>Bin</first><last>Zhang</last></author>
    <author><first>Mari</first><last>Ostendorf</last></author>
    <booktitle>Proceedings of the Workshop on Language in Social Media (LSM 2011)</booktitle>
    <month>June</month>
    <year>2011</year>
    <address>Portland, Oregon</address>
    <publisher>Association for Computational Linguistics</publisher>
    <pages>39&#8211;47</pages>
    <url>http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/W11-0706</url>
    <bibtype>inproceedings</bibtype>
    <bibkey>marin-zhang-ostendorf:2011:LSM</bibkey>
  </paper>

  <paper id="0707">
    <title>Annotating Social Acts: Authority Claims and Alignment Moves in Wikipedia Talk Pages</title>
    <author><first>Emily M.</first><last>Bender</last></author>
    <author><first>Jonathan T.</first><last>Morgan</last></author>
    <author><first>Meghan</first><last>Oxley</last></author>
    <author><first>Mark</first><last>Zachry</last></author>
    <author><first>Brian</first><last>Hutchinson</last></author>
    <author><first>Alex</first><last>Marin</last></author>
    <author><first>Bin</first><last>Zhang</last></author>
    <author><first>Mari</first><last>Ostendorf</last></author>
    <booktitle>Proceedings of the Workshop on Language in Social Media (LSM 2011)</booktitle>
    <month>June</month>
    <year>2011</year>
    <address>Portland, Oregon</address>
    <publisher>Association for Computational Linguistics</publisher>
    <pages>48&#8211;57</pages>
    <url>http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/W11-0707</url>
    <bibtype>inproceedings</bibtype>
    <bibkey>bender-EtAl:2011:LSM</bibkey>
  </paper>

  <paper id="0708">
    <title>Analyzing the Dynamic Evolution of Hashtags on Twitter: a Language-Based Approach</title>
    <author><first>Evandro</first><last>Cunha</last></author>
    <author><first>Gabriel</first><last>Magno</last></author>
    <author><first>Giovanni</first><last>Comarela</last></author>
    <author><first>Virgilio</first><last>Almeida</last></author>
    <author><first>Marcos Andr&#232;</first><last>Gon&#231;alves</last></author>
    <author><first>Fabricio</first><last>Benevenuto</last></author>
    <booktitle>Proceedings of the Workshop on Language in Social Media (LSM 2011)</booktitle>
    <month>June</month>
    <year>2011</year>
    <address>Portland, Oregon</address>
    <publisher>Association for Computational Linguistics</publisher>
    <pages>58&#8211;65</pages>
    <url>http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/W11-0708</url>
    <bibtype>inproceedings</bibtype>
    <bibkey>cunha-EtAl:2011:LSM</bibkey>
  </paper>

  <paper id="0709">
    <title>Why is "SXSW" trending? Exploring Multiple Text Sources for Twitter Topic Summarization</title>
    <author><first>Fei</first><last>Liu</last></author>
    <author><first>Yang</first><last>Liu</last></author>
    <author><first>Fuliang</first><last>Weng</last></author>
    <booktitle>Proceedings of the Workshop on Language in Social Media (LSM 2011)</booktitle>
    <month>June</month>
    <year>2011</year>
    <address>Portland, Oregon</address>
    <publisher>Association for Computational Linguistics</publisher>
    <pages>66&#8211;75</pages>
    <url>http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/W11-0709</url>
    <bibtype>inproceedings</bibtype>
    <bibkey>liu-liu-weng:2011:LSM</bibkey>
  </paper>

  <paper id="0710">
    <title>Language use as a reflection of socialization in online communities</title>
    <author><first>Dong</first><last>Nguyen</last></author>
    <author><first>Carolyn</first><last>P. Ros&#232;</last></author>
    <booktitle>Proceedings of the Workshop on Language in Social Media (LSM 2011)</booktitle>
    <month>June</month>
    <year>2011</year>
    <address>Portland, Oregon</address>
    <publisher>Association for Computational Linguistics</publisher>
    <pages>76&#8211;85</pages>
    <url>http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/W11-0710</url>
    <bibtype>inproceedings</bibtype>
    <bibkey>nguyen-prose:2011:LSM</bibkey>
  </paper>

  <paper id="0711">
    <title>Email Formality in the Workplace: A Case Study on the Enron Corpus</title>
    <author><first>Kelly</first><last>Peterson</last></author>
    <author><first>Matt</first><last>Hohensee</last></author>
    <author><first>Fei</first><last>Xia</last></author>
    <booktitle>Proceedings of the Workshop on Language in Social Media (LSM 2011)</booktitle>
    <month>June</month>
    <year>2011</year>
    <address>Portland, Oregon</address>
    <publisher>Association for Computational Linguistics</publisher>
    <pages>86&#8211;95</pages>
    <url>http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/W11-0711</url>
    <bibtype>inproceedings</bibtype>
    <bibkey>peterson-hohensee-xia:2011:LSM</bibkey>
  </paper>

</volume>

