Recent Advances in Computational Terminology

Didier Bourigault & Christian Jacquemin and Marie-Claude L’Homme 2001


E-Book: 399 English pages

Publisher: John Benjamins

Price: 1000 Toman

DOWNLOAD: Recent Advances in Computational Terminology (Bourigault & Jacquemin & L’Homme 2001).

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This first collection of selected articles from researchers in automatic analysis, storage, and use of terminology, and specialists in applied linguistics, computational linguistics, information retrieval, and artificial intelligence offers new insights on computational terminology. The recent needs for intelligent information access, automatic query translation, cross-lingual information retrieval, knowledge management, and document handling have led practitioners and engineers to focus on automated term handling. This book offers new perspectives on their expectations. It will be of interest to terminologists, translators, language or knowledge engineers, librarians and all others dependent on the automation of terminology processing in professional practices.
The articles cover themes such as automatic thesaurus construction, automatic term acquisition, automatic term translation, automatic indexing and abstracting, and computer-aided knowledge acquisition.
The high academic standing of the contributors together with their experience in terminology management results in a set of contributions that tackle original and unique scientific issues in correlation with genuine applications of terminology processing.


Quotes

“[…] an excellent starting point for those who would like to rapidly understand the basic problems in the field, to become aware of the major achievements, to get new ideas about potential applications, to update some pointers to an abundant literature, and to get a rapid overview of ongoing work in the field.”
Philippe Langlais
“This is a welcome addition to the literature as it represents one of the few places where papers on this topic are gathered in one volume. Previously, information on computational terminology was scattered throughout the literature in isolated journal papers, conference papers, etc. The editors are to be commended for consolidating high-quality research on computational terminology into a single collection.”

Lynne Bowker, University of Ottawa, in Machine Translation 18, 2003