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- Q1322093 subject Q449971.
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- Q1322093 subject Q8587891.
- Q1322093 subject Q8700522.
- Q1322093 subject Q8717212.
- Q1322093 abstract "In computational linguistics, FrameNet is a project housed at the International Computer Science Institute in Berkeley, California which produces an electronic resource based on a theory of meaning calledframe semantics. FrameNet reveals for example that the sentence "John sold a car to Mary" essentially describes the same basic situation (semantic frame) as "Mary bought a car from John", just from a different perspective. A semantic frame can be thought of as a conceptual structure describing an event, relation, or object and the participants in it. The FrameNet lexical database contains around 1,200 semantic frames, 13,000 lexical units (a pairing of a word with a meaning; polysemous words are represented by several lexical units) and over 190,000 example sentences. FrameNet is largely the creation of Charles J. Fillmore, who developed the theory of frame semantics that the project is based on, and was initially the project leader when the project began in 1997. Collin Baker became the project manager in 2000. The FrameNet project has been influential in both linguistics and natural language processing, where it led to the task of automatic Semantic Role Labeling.".
- Q1322093 wikiPageExternalLink framenet.dk.
- Q1322093 wikiPageExternalLink framenet.icsi.berkeley.edu.
- Q1322093 wikiPageExternalLink displayReport.php?anno=9791.
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- Q1322093 wikiPageExternalLink gframenet.gmc.utexas.edu.
- Q1322093 wikiPageExternalLink jfn.st.hc.keio.ac.jp.
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- Q1322093 wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Q1322093 wikiPageExternalLink book.pdf.
- Q1322093 wikiPageExternalLink lu9791.xml.
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- Q1322093 wikiPageWikiLink Q449971.
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- Q1322093 wikiPageWikiLink Q8717212.
- Q1322093 comment "In computational linguistics, FrameNet is a project housed at the International Computer Science Institute in Berkeley, California which produces an electronic resource based on a theory of meaning calledframe semantics. FrameNet reveals for example that the sentence "John sold a car to Mary" essentially describes the same basic situation (semantic frame) as "Mary bought a car from John", just from a different perspective.".
- Q1322093 label "FrameNet".