The research meetings, visits, and projects supported by ELIAS result in various scientific outcomes, which are listed below. For many of the activities listed under ‘Supported‘ the outcomes are expected several months after the activity is finished due to the writing-reviewing-publishing cycle of conferences and journals.
- Publication
- Joao Palotti, Lorraine Goeuriot, Guido Zuccon, Allan Hanbury, Ranking Health Web Pages with Relevance and Understandability, SIGIR 2016
- PAN@FIRE: Overview of the Cross-Language !ndian News Story Search (CL!NSS) Track.
- CLEF 2012 Information Access Evaluation meets Multilinguality, Multimodality, and Visual Analytics.
- PAN 2012: Uncovering Plagiarism, Authorship, and Social Software Misuse.
- PROMISE Winter School 2012 Information Retrieval meets Information Visualization.
- Frontiers, Challenges, and Opportunities for Information Retrieval.
- This report is the outcome of the SWIRL II workshop and describes a diverse set of research directions, project ideas, and challenge areas. It also provides detailed discussion of six proposals that were voted “most interesting” by the workshop participants.
- CLEF 2011: Conference on Multilingual and Multimodal Information Access Evaluation.
- A Corpus for Entity Profiling in Microblog Posts.
- Two sets of annotations are released as a result of Damiano Spina’s visit to the University of Amsterdam. The first set is created using a pooling methodology, for which various methods for automatically extracting aspects from tweets that are relevant for an entity have been implemented. Human assessors have labeled each of the candidates as being relevant or not. The second set contains opinion targets for which annotators consider individual tweets related to an entity and manually identify whether the tweet is opinionated. If so, they annotate which part of the tweet is subjective and what the target of the sentiment is.
- More information: http://nlp.uned.es/~damiano/datasets/entityProfiling_ORM_Twitter.html