Abstract is missing.
- Annotation Schemes for Surface Construction LabelingLori Levin. 1 [doi]
- From Lexical Functional Grammar to Enhanced Universal DependenciesAdam Przepiórkowski, Agnieszka Patejuk. 2-4 [doi]
- Leaving no token behind: comprehensive (and delicious) annotation of MWEs and supersensesNathan Schneider. 5 [doi]
- Processing MWEs: Neurocognitive Bases of Verbal MWEs and Lexical Cohesiveness within MWEsShohini Bhattasali, Murielle Fabre, John Hale. 6-17 [doi]
- The Interplay of Form and Meaning in Complex Medical Terms: Evidence from a Clinical CorpusLeonie Grön, Ann Bertels, Kris Heylen. 18-29 [doi]
- Discourse and Lexicons: Lexemes, MWEs, Grammatical Constructions and Compositional Word Combinations to Signal Discourse RelationsLaurence Danlos. 30-40 [doi]
- From Chinese Word Segmentation to Extraction of Constructions: Two Sides of the Same Algorithmic CoinJean-Pierre Colson. 41-50 [doi]
- Fixed Similes: Measuring aspects of the relation between MWE idiomatic semantics and syntactic flexibilityStella Markantonatou, Panagiotis Kouris, Yanis Maistros. 51-61 [doi]
- Fine-Grained Termhood Prediction for German Compound Terms Using Neural NetworksAnna Hätty, Sabine Schulte im Walde. 62-73 [doi]
- Towards a Computational Lexicon for Moroccan Darija: Words, Idioms, and ConstructionsJamal Laoudi, Claire Bonial, Lucia Donatelli, Stephen Tratz, Clare R. Voss. 74-85 [doi]
- Verbal Multiword Expressions in Basque CorporaUxoa Iñurrieta Urmeneta, Itziar Aduriz, Ainara Estarrona, Itziar Gonzalez-Dios, Antton Gurrutxaga, Ruben Urizar, Iñaki Alegria. 86-95 [doi]
- Annotation of Tense and Aspect Semantics for Sentential AMRLucia Donatelli, Michael Regan, William Croft, Nathan Schneider. 96-108 [doi]
- A Syntax-Based Scheme for the Annotation and Segmentation of German Spoken Language InteractionsSwantje Westpfahl, Jan Gorisch. 109-120 [doi]
- An Annotated Corpus of Picture Stories Retold by Language LearnersChristine Köhn, Arne Köhn. 121-132 [doi]
- Developing and Evaluating Annotation Procedures for Twitter Data during Hazard EventsKevin Stowe, Martha Palmer, T. Jennings Anderson, Marina Kogan, Leysia Palen, Kenneth M. Anderson, Rebecca Morss, Julie Demuth, Heather Lazrus. 133-143 [doi]
- A Treebank for the Healthcare DomainNganthoibi Oinam, Diwakar Mishra, Pinal Patel, Narayan Choudhary, Hitesh Desai. 144-155 [doi]
- The RST Spanish-Chinese TreebankShuyuan Cao, Iria da Cunha, Mikel Iruskieta. 156-166 [doi]
- All Roads Lead to UD: Converting Stanford and Penn Parses to English Universal Dependencies with Multilayer AnnotationsSiyao Peng, Amir Zeldes. 167-177 [doi]
- The Other Side of the Coin: Unsupervised Disambiguation of Potentially Idiomatic Expressions by Contrasting SensesHessel Haagsma, Malvina Nissim, Johan Bos. 178-184 [doi]
- Do Character-Level Neural Network Language Models Capture Knowledge of Multiword Expression Compositionality?Ali Hakimi Parizi, Paul Cook. 185-192 [doi]
- Constructing an Annotated Corpus of Verbal MWEs for EnglishAbigail Walsh, Claire Bonial, Kristina Geeraert, John P. McCrae, Nathan Schneider, Clarissa Somers. 193-200 [doi]
- Cooperating Tools for MWE Lexicon Management and Corpus AnnotationYuji Matsumoto 0001, Akihiko Kato, Hiroyuki Shindo, Toshio Morita. 201-206 [doi]
- "Fingers in the Nose": Evaluating Speakers' Identification of Multi-Word Expressions Using a Slightly Gamified Crowdsourcing PlatformKarën Fort, Bruno Guillaume, Matthieu Constant, Nicolas Lefebvre, Yann-Alan Pilatte. 207-213 [doi]
- Improving Domain Independent Question Parsing with Synthetic TreebanksHalim Boukaram, Nizar Habash, Micheline Ziadee, Majd F. Sakr. 214-221 [doi]
- Edition 1.1 of the PARSEME Shared Task on Automatic Identification of Verbal Multiword ExpressionsCarlos Ramisch, Silvio Ricardo Cordeiro, Agata Savary, Veronika Vincze, Verginica Barbu Mititelu, Archna Bhatia, Maja Buljan, Marie Candito, Polona Gantar, Voula Giouli, Tunga Güngör, Abdelati Hawwari, Uxoa Iñurrieta, Jolanta Kovalevskaite, Simon Krek, Timm Lichte, Chaya Liebeskind, Johanna Monti, Carla Parra Escartín, Behrang QasemiZadeh, Nathan Schneider, Ivelina Stoyanova, Ashwini Vaidya, Abigail Walsh. 222-240 [doi]
- CRF-Seq and CRF-DepTree at PARSEME Shared Task 2018: Detecting Verbal MWEs using Sequential and Dependency-Based ApproachesErwan Moreau, Ashjan Alsulaimani, Alfredo Maldonado, Carl Vogel. 241-247 [doi]
- Deep-BGT at PARSEME Shared Task 2018: Bidirectional LSTM-CRF Model for Verbal Multiword Expression IdentificationGozde Berk, Berna Erden, Tunga Güngör. 248-253 [doi]
- GBD-NER at PARSEME Shared Task 2018: Multi-Word Expression Detection Using Bidirectional Long-Short-Term Memory Networks and Graph-Based DecodingTiberiu Boros, Ruxandra Burtica. 254-260 [doi]
- Mumpitz at PARSEME Shared Task 2018: A Bidirectional LSTM for the Identification of Verbal Multiword ExpressionsRafael Ehren, Timm Lichte, Younes Samih. 261-267 [doi]
- TRAPACC and TRAPACCS at PARSEME Shared Task 2018: Neural Transition Tagging of Verbal Multiword ExpressionsRegina Stodden, Behrang QasemiZadeh, Laura Kallmeyer. 268-274 [doi]
- TRAVERSAL at PARSEME Shared Task 2018: Identification of Verbal Multiword Expressions Using a Discriminative Tree-Structured ModelJakub Waszczuk. 275-282 [doi]
- VarIDE at PARSEME Shared Task 2018: Are Variants Really as Alike as Two Peas in a Pod?Caroline Pasquer, Carlos Ramisch, Agata Savary, Jean-Yves Antoine. 283-289 [doi]
- Veyn at PARSEME Shared Task 2018: Recurrent Neural Networks for VMWE IdentificationNicolas Zampieri, Manon Scholivet, Carlos Ramisch, Benoit Favre. 290-296 [doi]