2018
pdf
bib
abs
A Pedagogical Application of NooJ in Language Teaching: The Adjective in Spanish and Italian
Andrea Rodrigo
|
Mario Monteleone
|
Silvia Reyes
Proceedings of the First Workshop on Linguistic Resources for Natural Language Processing
In this paper, a pedagogical application of NooJ to the teaching and learning of Spanish as a foreign language is presented, which is directed to a specific addressee: learners whose mother tongue is Italian. The category ‘adjective’ has been chosen on account of its lower frequency of occurrence in texts written in Spanish, and particularly in the Argentine Rioplatense variety, and with the aim of developing strategies to increase its use. In addition, the features that the adjective shares with other grammatical categories render it extremely productive and provide elements that enrich the learners’ proficiency. The reference corpus contains the front pages of the Argentinian newspaper Clarín related to an emblematic historical moment, whose starting point is 24 March 1976, when a military coup began, and covers a thirty year period until 24 March 2006. It can be seen how the term desaparecido emerges with all its cultural and social charge, providing a context which allows an approach to Rioplatense Spanish from a more comprehensive perspective. Finally, a pedagogical proposal accounting for the application of the NooJ platform in language teaching is included.
2014
pdf
bib
abs
From Natural Language to Ontology Population in the Cultural Heritage Domain. A Computational Linguistics-based approach.
Maria Pia di Buono
|
Mario Monteleone
Proceedings of the Ninth International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC'14)
This paper presents an on-going Natural Language Processing (NLP) research based on Lexicon-Grammar (LG) and aimed at improving knowledge management of Cultural Heritage (CH) domain. We intend to demonstrate how our language formalization technique can be applied for both processing and populating a domain ontology. We also use NLP techniques for text extraction and mining to fill information gaps and improve access to cultural resources. The Linguistic Resources (LRs, i.e. electronic dictionaries) we built can be used in the structuring of effective Knowledge Management Systems (KMSs). In order to apply to Parts of Speech (POS) the classes and properties defined by the Conseil Interational des Musees (CIDOC) Conceptual Reference Model (CRM), we use Finite State Transducers/Automata (FSTs/FSA) and their variables built in the form of graphs. FSTs/FSA are also used for analysing corpora in order to retrieve recursive sentence structures, in which combinatorial and semantic constraints identify properties and denote relationship. Besides, FSTs/FSA are also used to match our electronic dictionary entries (ALUs, or Atomic Linguistic Units) to RDF subject, object and predicate (SKOS Core Vocabulary). This matching of linguistic data to RDF and their translation into SPARQL/SERQL path expressions allows the use ALUs to process natural-language queries.
pdf
bib
Terminology and Knowledge Representation. Italian Linguistic Resources for the Archaeological Domain
Maria Pia di Buono
|
Mario Monteleone
|
Annibale Elia
Proceedings of Workshop on Lexical and Grammatical Resources for Language Processing
2013
pdf
bib
Cross-Lingual Information Retrieval and Semantic Interoperability for Cultural Heritage Repositories
Johanna Monti
|
Mario Monteleone
|
Maria Pia di Buono
|
Federica Marano
Proceedings of the International Conference Recent Advances in Natural Language Processing RANLP 2013
pdf
bib
Multi-word processing in an ontology-based cross-language information retrieval model for specific domain collections
Maria Pia di Buono
|
Johanna Monti
|
Mario Monteleone
|
Federica Marano
Proceedings of the Workshop on Multi-word Units in Machine Translation and Translation Technologies
2010
pdf
bib
Mixed up with machine translation: multi-word units disambiguation challenge
Anabele Barreiro
|
Annibale Elia
|
Johanna Monti
|
Mario Monteleone
Proceedings of Translating and the Computer 32