Martha Palmer
University of Colorado Boulder
331 Papers
4.2K Citations
Martha Palmer is an academic researcher from University of Colorado Boulder. The author has contributed to research in topics: Computer science & Verb. The author has an hindex of 58, co-authored 311 publications. Previous affiliations of Martha Palmer include Michigan State University & University UCINF.
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Papers
Statistical Dependency Parsing in Korean: From Corpus Generation To Automatic Parsing
Jinho D. Choi,Martha Palmer +1 more
- 06 Oct 2011
TL;DR: This paper builds a Korean dependency Treebank from an existing constituent Treebank, and shows how to extract useful features for dependency parsing from rich morphology in Korean, using both gold-standard and automatic morphological analysis.
28
•Proceedings Article
An Overview of the CRAFT Concept Annotation Guidelines
Michael Bada,Miriam R. Eckert,Martha Palmer,Lawrence Hunter +3 more
- 15 Jul 2010
TL;DR: The concept-annotation guidelines have been designed to be able to be used with any terminology employed to semantically annotate concept mentions in text and are available for external use.
28
•Proceedings Article
Extending a Verb-lexicon Using a Semantically Annotated Corpus.
Karin Kipper,Benjamin Snyder,Martha Palmer +2 more
- 01 May 2004
TL;DR: This paper describes the association of an hierarchical verb lexicon, VerbNet, with a semantically annotated corpus, the Proposition Bank, and focuses on comparisons of the syntactic coverage of the two resources as a method of evaluating their correspondence.
28
The Rich Event Ontology
Susan Brown,Claire Bonial,Leo Obrst,Martha Palmer +3 more
- 01 Aug 2017
TL;DR: A new lexical semantic resource, The Rich Event On-tology, is described, which provides an independent conceptual backbone to unify existing semantic role labeling schemas and augment them with event-to-event causal and temporal relations.
•Proceedings Article
Foundations of a Multilayer Annotation Framework for Twitter Communications During Crisis Events
William J. Corvey,Sudha Verma,Sarah Vieweg,Martha Palmer,James Martin +4 more
- 01 May 2012
TL;DR: A natural language processing component of the EPIC (Empowering the Public with Information in Crisis) Project infrastructure, designed to extract linguistic and behavioral information from tweet text to aid in the task of information integration.