[Corpora-List] History of POS tagging
Serge Sharoff
S.Sharoff at leeds.ac.uk
Fri Feb 27 16:38:19 UTC 2009
I think we're getting into the 'Four Yorkshiremen' sketch.
This is what we dug up as a reference for our tagger:
@Article{nikolaeva58,
author = {Nikolaeva, T.N.},
title = {Soviet developments in machine translation: {Russian} sentence analysis},
journal = {Mechanical Translation},
year = 1958,
volume = 5,
number = 2,
pages = {51--59},
url = {http://www.mt-archive.info/MT-1958-Nikolaeva.pdf}
}
however, I'm sure any early MT system not based on a full-form lexicon used a tagger of some sort.
Serge
-----Original Message-----
From: corpora-bounces at uib.no on behalf of Diana Santos
Sent: Fri 27/02/2009 16:27
To: CORPORA
Subject: [Corpora-List] History of POS tagging
Before I get more answers to my question
>> the first instance of POS tagger in the
>> literature was Ken
>> Church's, as a first step towards full parsing of English.
let me note that if I had read with enough attention Stig Johansson's contribution to the Corpus Linguistics: An International Handbook, I would have had plenty of material in his section 6.1 Part-of-speech tagging ...
So the current winner is:
Greene, Barbara B. & Gerald M. Rubin. "Automated Grammatical Tagging of English". Providence, R.I.: Department of Linguistics, Brown University. 1971.
I am still interested in earlier documents/papers/reports if they exist, in any language!
Thanks again
Diana
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