Results 1 -
3 of
3
Using contextual speller techniques and language modeling for ESL error correction
- In Proceedings of IJCNLP 2008
"... We present a modular system for detection and correction of errors made by nonnative (English as a Second Language = ESL) writers. We focus on two error types: the incorrect use of determiners and the choice of prepositions. We use a decisiontree approach inspired by contextual spelling systems for ..."
Abstract
-
Cited by 28 (3 self)
- Add to MetaCart
We present a modular system for detection and correction of errors made by nonnative (English as a Second Language = ESL) writers. We focus on two error types: the incorrect use of determiners and the choice of prepositions. We use a decisiontree approach inspired by contextual spelling systems for detection and correction suggestions, and a large language model trained on the Gigaword corpus to provide additional information to filter out spurious suggestions. We show how this system performs on a corpus of non-native English text and discuss strategies for future enhancements. 1
Collocations of Complex Words: Implications for the Acquisition with a Stochastic Grammar
- In International Workshop on `Computational Approaches to Collocations
, 2002
"... This paper presents an investigation into the automatic extraction of noun+verb-collocations from German text corpora, by means of full parsing with a lexicalized statistical grammar. We argue that an approach based on full parsing has advantages over a partial analysis (see section 2.1) ..."
Abstract
-
Cited by 4 (0 self)
- Add to MetaCart
This paper presents an investigation into the automatic extraction of noun+verb-collocations from German text corpora, by means of full parsing with a lexicalized statistical grammar. We argue that an approach based on full parsing has advantages over a partial analysis (see section 2.1)
Significant Triples: Adjective+Noun+Verb Combinations
"... We investigate the identification and, to some extent, the classification of collocational word groups that consist of an adjectival modifier (A), an accusative object noun (N), and a verb (V) by means of parsing a newspaper corpus with a lexicalized probabilistic grammar. ..."
Abstract
-
Cited by 1 (0 self)
- Add to MetaCart
We investigate the identification and, to some extent, the classification of collocational word groups that consist of an adjectival modifier (A), an accusative object noun (N), and a verb (V) by means of parsing a newspaper corpus with a lexicalized probabilistic grammar.

