Today I drafted some short reviews of papers about Wiktionary, from the backlog of the Wikimedia Research Newsletter. Reviews of the reviews and edits are welcome before the newsletter is published, in case I missed or misunderstood something too technical for me. :) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Wikipedia_Signpost/2015-09-30/Recent...
I think Wiktionary users can be very proud, as (in its multiple language editions) it's regularly shown to be an invaluable linguistic resource, already better than multiple or all competitors for a long series of purposes.
1.2 GLAWI, a free XML-encoded Machine-Readable Dictionary built from the French Wiktionary 1.3 IWNLP: Inverse Wiktionary for Natural Language Processing 1.4 knoWitiary: A Machine Readable Incarnation of Wiktionary 1.5 Zmorge: A German Morphological Lexicon Extracted from Wiktionary 1.6 Dbnary: Wiktionary as Linked Data for 12 Language Editions with Enhanced Translation Relations 1.7 Observing Online Dictionary Users: Studies Using Wiktionary Log Files 1.8 Multilingual Open Relation Extraction Using Cross-lingual Projection
Nemo
Hi Nemo, there is also: http://svn.aksw.org/papers/2012/JIST_Wiktionary/public.pdf published at JIST in 2012 All the best, Sebastian
On 14.09.2015 01:55, Federico Leva (Nemo) wrote:
Today I drafted some short reviews of papers about Wiktionary, from the backlog of the Wikimedia Research Newsletter. Reviews of the reviews and edits are welcome before the newsletter is published, in case I missed or misunderstood something too technical for me. :) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Wikipedia_Signpost/2015-09-30/Recent...
I think Wiktionary users can be very proud, as (in its multiple language editions) it's regularly shown to be an invaluable linguistic resource, already better than multiple or all competitors for a long series of purposes.
1.2 GLAWI, a free XML-encoded Machine-Readable Dictionary built from the French Wiktionary 1.3 IWNLP: Inverse Wiktionary for Natural Language Processing 1.4 knoWitiary: A Machine Readable Incarnation of Wiktionary 1.5 Zmorge: A German Morphological Lexicon Extracted from Wiktionary 1.6 Dbnary: Wiktionary as Linked Data for 12 Language Editions with Enhanced Translation Relations 1.7 Observing Online Dictionary Users: Studies Using Wiktionary Log Files 1.8 Multilingual Open Relation Extraction Using Cross-lingual Projection
Nemo
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