This is a trained model for the supervised machine learning tool NameTag 3 (https://ufal.mff.cuni.cz/nametag/3/), trained on the Czech Named Entity Corpus 2.0 (https://ufal.mff.cuni.cz/cnec/cnec2.0). NameTag 3 is an open-source tool for both flat and nested named entity recognition (NER). NameTag 3 identifies proper names in text and classifies them into a set of predefined categories, such as names of persons, locations, organizations, etc. The model documentation can be found at https://ufal.mff.cuni.cz/nametag/3/models#czech-cnec2.
This is a trained model for the supervised machine learning tool NameTag 3 (https://ufal.mff.cuni.cz/nametag/3/), trained jointly on several NE corpora: English CoNLL-2003, German CoNLL-2003, Dutch CoNLL-2002, Spanish CoNLL-2002, Ukrainian Lang-uk, and Czech CNEC 2.0, all harmonized to flat NEs with 4 labels PER, ORG, LOC, and MISC. NameTag 3 is an open-source tool for both flat and nested named entity recognition (NER). NameTag 3 identifies proper names in text and classifies them into a set of predefined categories, such as names of persons, locations, organizations, etc. The model documentation can be found at https://ufal.mff.cuni.cz/nametag/3/models#multilingual-conll.
Netgraph is a graphically oriented client-server application for searching in linguistically annotated treebanks. The query language of Netgraph is simple and intuitive, yet powerful enough for treebanks with complex annotations schemes. The primary purpose of Netgraph is searching in the Prague Dependency Treebank 2.0, nevertheless it can be used for other treebanks as well.
NomVallex 2.0 is a manually annotated valency lexicon of Czech nouns and adjectives, created in the theoretical framework of the Functional Generative Description and based on corpus data (the SYN series of corpora from the Czech National Corpus and the Araneum Bohemicum Maximum corpus). In total, NomVallex is comprised of 1027 lexical units contained in 570 lexemes, covering the following parts-of-speech and derivational categories: deverbal or deadjectival nouns, and deverbal, denominal, deadjectival or primary adjectives. Valency properties of a lexical unit are captured in a valency frame (modeled as a sequence of valency slots, each supplemented with a list of morphemic forms) and documented by corpus examples. In order to make it possible to study the relationship between valency behavior of base words and their derivatives, lexical units of nouns and adjectives in NomVallex are linked to their respective base lexical units (contained either in NomVallex itself or, in case of verbs, in the VALLEX lexicon), linking up to three parts-of-speech (i.e., noun – verb, adjective – verb, noun – adjective, and noun – adjective – verb).
In order to facilitate comparison, this submission also contains abbreviated entries of the base verbs of these nouns and adjectives from the VALLEX lexicon and simplified entries of the covered nouns and adjectives from the PDT-Vallex lexicon.
The NomVallex I. lexicon describes valency of Czech deverbal nouns belonging to three semantic classes, i.e. Communication (dotaz 'question'), Mental Action (plán 'plan') and Psych State (nenávist 'hatred'). It covers both stem-nominals and root-nominals (dotazování se 'asking' and dotaz 'question'). In total, the lexicon includes 505 lexical units in 248 lexemes. Valency properties are captured in the form of valency frames, specifying valency slots and their morphemic forms, and are exemplified by corpus examples.
In order to facilitate comparison, this submission also contains abbreviated entries of the source verbs of these nouns from the Vallex lexicon and simplified entries of the covered nouns from the PDT-Vallex lexicon.
OAGK is a keyword extraction/generation dataset consisting of 2.2 million abstracts, titles and keyword strings from cientific articles. Texts were lowercased and tokenized with Stanford CoreNLP tokenizer. No other preprocessing steps were applied in this release version. Dataset records (samples) are stored as JSON lines in each text file.
This data is derived from OAG data collection (https://aminer.org/open-academic-graph) which was released under ODC-BY licence.
This data (OAGK Keyword Generation Dataset) is released under CC-BY licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
If using it, please cite the following paper:
Çano, Erion and Bojar, Ondřej, 2019, Keyphrase Generation: A Text Summarization Struggle, 2019 Annual Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics, June 2019, Minneapolis, USA
OAGKX is a keyword extraction/generation dataset consisting of 22674436 abstracts, titles and keyword strings from scientific articles. The texts were lowercased and tokenized with Stanford CoreNLP tokenizer. No other preprocessing steps were applied in this release version. Dataset records (samples) are stored as JSON lines in each text file.
The data is derived from OAG data collection (https://aminer.org/open-academic-graph) which was released under ODC-BY license.
This data (OAGKX Keyword Generation Dataset) is released under CC-BY license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
If using it, please cite the following paper:
Çano Erion, Bojar Ondřej. Keyphrase Generation: A Multi-Aspect Survey. FRUCT 2019, Proceedings of the 25th Conference of the Open Innovations Association FRUCT, Helsinki, Finland, Nov. 2019
To reproduce the experiments in the above paper, you can use the first 100000 lines of part_0_0.txt file.
OAGL is a paper metadata dataset consisting of 17528680 records which comprise various scientific publication attributes like abstracts, titles, keywords, publication years, venues, etc. The last field of each record is the page length of the corresponding publication. Dataset records (samples) are stored as JSON lines in each text file. The data is derived from OAG data collection (https://aminer.org/open-academic-graph) which was released under ODC-BY license. This data (OAGL Paper Metadata Dataset) is released under CC-BY license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
If using it, please cite the following paper:
Çano Erion, Bojar Ondřej: How Many Pages? Paper Length Prediction from the Metadata.
NLPIR 2020, Proceedings of the the 4th International Conference on Natural Language
Processing and Information Retrieval, Seoul, Korea, December 2020.
OAGS is a title generation dataset consisting of 34993700 abstracts and titles from scientific articles. Texts were lowercased and tokenized with Stanford CoreNLP tokenizer. No other preprocessing steps were applied in this release version. Dataset records (samples) are stored as JSON lines in each text file. The data is derived from OAG data collection (https://aminer.org/open-academic-graph) which was released under ODC-BY licence. This data (OAGS Title Generation Dataset) is released under CC-BY licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). If using it, please cite the following paper: Çano, Erion and Bojar, Ondřej, 2019, "Efficiency Metrics for Data-Driven Models: A Text Summarization Case Study", INLG 2019, The 12th International Conference on Natural Language Generation, November 2019, Tokyo, Japan. To reproduce the experiments in the above paper, you can use oags_train1.txt, oags_train2.txt, oags_train3.txt, oags_test.txt and oags_val.txt files. If you need more data samples you can get them from oags_train_backup.txt and oags_val-test_backup.txt.
OAGSX is a title generation dataset consisting of 34408509 abstracts and titles from scientific articles. The texts were lowercased and tokenized with Stanford CoreNLP tokenizer. No other preprocessing steps were applied in this release version. Dataset records (samples) are stored as JSON lines in each text file.
The data is derived from OAG data collection (https://aminer.org/open-academic-graph) which was released under ODC-BY license.
This data (OAGSX Title Generation Dataset) is released under CC-BY license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
If using it, please consider citing also the following paper:
Çano Erion, Bojar Ondřej. Two Huge Title and Keyword Generation Corpora of Research Articles.
LREC 2020, Proceedings of the the 12th International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation,
Marseille, France, May 2020.