Difference between revisions of "ACL Test-of-Time Papers Award Recipients"
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(Created page with "=== 2020 === * The 2020 winners of the 1995 Test-of-Time Award are: ** Barbara J. Grosz, Aravind K. Joshi, Scott Weinstein. Centering: A Framework for Modeling the Local Coher...") |
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=== 2019 === | === 2019 === | ||
+ | * The 2019 winner of the 1994 Test-of-Time Award is: | ||
+ | ** Bernard Merialdo. Tagging English Text with a Probabilistic Model. Computational Linguistics 20(2), pp. 155–171 | ||
+ | * The 2019 winner of the 2009 Test-of-Time Award is: | ||
+ | ** Theresa Wilson, Janyce Wiebe, Paul Hoffmann. Recognizing Contextual Polarity: An Exploration of Features for Phrase-Level Sentiment Analysis. Computational Linguistics 35(3), pp. 399–433 |
Revision as of 18:33, 5 January 2021
2020
- The 2020 winners of the 1995 Test-of-Time Award are:
- Barbara J. Grosz, Aravind K. Joshi, Scott Weinstein. Centering: A Framework for Modeling the Local Coherence of Discourse. Computational Linguistics, 21(2), June
- David Yarowsky. Unsupervised Word Sense Disambiguation Rivaling Supervised Methods. 33rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics
- The 2020 winners of the 2010 Test-of-Time Award are:
- Marco Baroni, Alessandro Lenci. Distributional Memory: A General Framework for Corpus-Based Semantics. Computational Linguistics, 36(4), December
- Joseph Turian, Lev-Arie Ratinov, Yoshua Bengio. Word Representations: A Simple and General Method for Semi-Supervised Learning. 48th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics
2019
- The 2019 winner of the 1994 Test-of-Time Award is:
- Bernard Merialdo. Tagging English Text with a Probabilistic Model. Computational Linguistics 20(2), pp. 155–171
- The 2019 winner of the 2009 Test-of-Time Award is:
- Theresa Wilson, Janyce Wiebe, Paul Hoffmann. Recognizing Contextual Polarity: An Exploration of Features for Phrase-Level Sentiment Analysis. Computational Linguistics 35(3), pp. 399–433