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New Directions in Question AnsweringOctober 2004
Publisher:
  • AAAI Press
ISBN:978-0-262-63304-8
Published:01 October 2004
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Abstract

No abstract available.

Cited By

  1. Modrzejewski M and Rokita P Critical Analysis of Conversational Agent Technology for Intelligent Customer Support and Proposition of a New Solution Artificial Intelligence and Soft Computing, (723-733)
  2. Ferneda E, do Prado H, Batista A and Pinheiro M Extracting definitions from brazilian legal texts Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Computational Science and Its Applications - Volume Part III, (631-646)
  3. ACM
    Cheng W, Kasneci G, Graepel T, Stern D and Herbrich R Automated feature generation from structured knowledge Proceedings of the 20th ACM international conference on Information and knowledge management, (1395-1404)
  4. ACM
    Mulkar-Mehta R, Gordon A, Hobbs J and Hovy E Causal markers across domains and genres of discourse Proceedings of the sixth international conference on Knowledge capture, (183-184)
  5. Olvera-Lobo M and Gutiérrez-Artacho J (2011). Open- vs. Restricted-Domain QA Systems in the Biomedical Field, Journal of Information Science, 37:2, (152-162), Online publication date: 1-Apr-2011.
  6. Mishra T and Bangalore S (2011). Finite-state models for speech-based search on mobile devices, Natural Language Engineering, 17:2, (243-264), Online publication date: 1-Apr-2011.
  7. Ferrucci D, Brown E, Chu‐Carroll J, Fan J, Gondek D, Kalyanpur A, Lally A, Murdock J, Nyberg E, Prager J, Schlaefer N and Welty C (2010). Building Watson, AI Magazine, 31:3, (59-79), Online publication date: 1-Sep-2010.
  8. Mishra T and Bangalore S Qme! Human Language Technologies: The 2010 Annual Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics, (55-63)
  9. Westerhout E Definition extraction using linguistic and structural features Proceedings of the 1st Workshop on Definition Extraction, (61-67)
  10. Sonntag D Introspection and adaptable model integration for dialogue-based question answering Proceedings of the 21st International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence, (1549-1554)
  11. Suktarachan M and Saint-Dizier P An application of lexical semantics annotation to question-answering in e-farming Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference on Computational Semantics, (338-342)
  12. ACM
    Pasca M Towards temporal web search Proceedings of the 2008 ACM symposium on Applied computing, (1117-1121)
  13. ACM
    Luo G, Tang C and Tian Y Answering relationship queries on the web Proceedings of the 16th international conference on World Wide Web, (561-570)
  14. Santos D and Costa L QolA Proceedings of the 7th international conference on Cross-Language Evaluation Forum: evaluation of multilingual and multi-modal information retrieval, (569-578)
  15. Maybury M, Stock O and Wahlster W (2006). Intelligent Interactive Entertainment Grand Challenges, IEEE Intelligent Systems, 21:5, (14-18), Online publication date: 1-Sep-2006.
  16. Navarro B, Moreno-Monteagudo L, Noguera E, Vázquez S, Llopis F and Montoyo A “How much context do you need?” Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Cross-Language Evalution Forum: accessing Multilingual Information Repositories, (273-282)
  17. Benamara F, Moriceau V and Saint-Dizier P COOPML Proceedings of the 2004 ACL Workshop on Discourse Annotation, (9-16)
Contributors
  • United States Department of Defense

Reviews

Raphael M. Malyankar

Question answering (QA) is a type of information retrieval in which a computerized system performs complex intelligent processing in response to queries posed in natural language (or a reasonable variation thereof). The complex intelligent processing involved in QA (compared to other forms of information retrieval) is typically characterized by some form of semantic analysis of the query, a search strategy that considers interrelationships between concepts in queries and in the corpus being searched; selection and prioritization of the contents of the response according to the query; and formulation of the response in terms appropriate to the query. Question answering has long been an area of research in artificial intelligence and information retrieval, and has gained increasing importance with the advent of the World Wide Web. This book grew out of the US intelligence community's advanced research and development activity in information technology (ARDA) advanced question answering for intelligence (AQUAINT) program. The volume is largely a compendium of research reports on specific projects or problems, prepared by experienced researchers in the field. The bulk of the book is taken up by 18 chapters on different aspects of QA, collectively covering a wide variety of activity in the field, ranging from question answering for terminology and definitions to advanced areas such as summarization, inferencing, and reuse. An introductory chapter provides an overview and roadmap, and two further chapters contain a short discussion and survey of past and present approaches, and of question answering on the World Wide Web, respectively. The rest of the book is divided into six sections, each a compilation of research reports on one facet or another of recent research in the field. The individual contributions are of high quality and reasonably deep, in spite of the limited amount of space for each; the papers (generally 10 to 14 pages apiece) are closer to conference length than journal length, most originating in an American Association for Artificial Intelligence (AAAI) symposium. Being largely a collection of selected research papers, this book is a fairly comprehensive but not necessarily complete survey of the field. Readers desiring further information will need to consult other sources as well (for example, the text retrieval conference (TREC) series). The book is, however, an excellent starting point, and well worth the reader's effort. The intended audience (researchers, practitioners, and students) will find it helpful, and it should also be suitable for a university seminar course. Prior exposure to artificial intelligence, information management, information retrieval or related subjects would be particularly helpful if the reader is to get the most out of this book. A comprehensive glossary and sizeable bibliography are included. Production quality is generally satisfactory, though deficient in places, especially in some of the figures. For example, the roadmap on page 13 is rather difficult to comprehend, due to the reduced size of its contents, as are the contents of Table 7.1 (page 90), and the graphs in Figure 14.2 (page 188). Overall, this book will make a good addition to an information management/retrieval or artificial intelligence collection. Online Computing Reviews Service

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