Abstract is missing.
- Reconstruction of Separable Particle Verbs in a Corpus of Spoken GermanDolores Batinic, Thomas Schmidt. 3-10 [doi]
- Detecting Vocal IronyFelix Burkhardt, Benjamin Weiss 0001, Florian Eyben, Jun Deng, Björn W. Schuller. 11-22 [doi]
- The Devil is in the Details: Parsing Unknown German WordsDaniel Dakota. 23-39 [doi]
- Exploring Ensemble Dependency Parsing to Reduce Manual Annotation WorkloadJessica Sohl, Heike Zinsmeister. 40-47 [doi]
- Different German and English Coreference Resolution Models for Multi-domain Content Curation ScenariosAnkit Srivastava, Sabine Weber, Peter Bourgonje, Georg Rehm. 48-61 [doi]
- Word and Sentence Segmentation in German: Overcoming Idiosyncrasies in the Use of Punctuation in Private CommunicationKyoko Sugisaki. 62-71 [doi]
- Fine-Grained POS Tagging of German Social Media and Web TextsStefan Thater. 72-80 [doi]
- Developing a Stemmer for German Based on a Comparative Analysis of Publicly Available StemmersLeonie Weissweiler, Alexander Fraser. 81-94 [doi]
- Negation Modeling for German Polarity ClassificationMichael Wiegand, Maximilian Wolf, Josef Ruppenhofer. 95-111 [doi]
- NECKAr: A Named Entity Classifier for WikidataJohanna Geiß, Andreas Spitz, Michael Gertz. 115-129 [doi]
- Investigating the Morphological Complexity of German Named Entities: The Case of the GermEval NER ChallengeBettina Klimek, Markus Ackermann, Amit Kirschenbaum, Sebastian Hellmann. 130-145 [doi]
- Detecting Named Entities and Relations in German Clinical ReportsRoland Roller, Nils Rethmeier, Philippe Thomas, Marc Hübner, Hans Uszkoreit, Oliver Staeck, Klemens Budde, Fabian Halleck, Danilo Schmidt. 146-154 [doi]
- In-Memory Distributed Training of Linear-Chain Conditional Random Fields with an Application to Fine-Grained Named Entity RecognitionRobert Schwarzenberg, Leonhard Hennig, Holmer Hemsen. 155-167 [doi]
- What Does This Imply? Examining the Impact of Implicitness on the Perception of Hate SpeechDarina Benikova, Michael Wojatzki, Torsten Zesch. 171-179 [doi]
- Automatic Classification of Abusive Language and Personal Attacks in Various Forms of Online CommunicationPeter Bourgonje, Julián Moreno Schneider, Ankit Srivastava, Georg Rehm. 180-191 [doi]
- Token Level Code-Switching Detection Using Wikipedia as a Lexical ResourceDaniel Claeser, Dennis Felske, Samantha Kent. 192-198 [doi]
- How Social Media Text Analysis Can Inform Disaster ManagementSabine Gründer-Fahrer, Antje Schlaf, Sebastian Wustmann. 199-207 [doi]
- A Comparative Study of Uncertainty Based Active Learning Strategies for General Purpose Twitter Sentiment Analysis with Deep Neural NetworksNils Haldenwang, Katrin Ihler, Julian Kniephoff, Oliver Vornberger. 208-215 [doi]
- An Infrastructure for Empowering Internet Users to Handle Fake News and Other Online Media PhenomenaGeorg Rehm. 216-231 [doi]
- Different Types of Automated and Semi-automated Semantic Storytelling: Curation Technologies for Different SectorsGeorg Rehm, Julián Moreno Schneider, Peter Bourgonje, Ankit Srivastava, Rolf Fricke, Jan Thomsen, Jing He, Joachim Quantz, Armin Berger, Luca König, Sören Räuchle, Jens Gerth, David Wabnitz. 232-247 [doi]
- Twitter Geolocation Prediction Using Neural NetworksPhilippe Thomas, Leonhard Hennig. 248-255 [doi]
- Diachronic Variation of Temporal Expressions in Scientific Writing Through the Lens of Relative EntropyStefania Degaetano-Ortlieb, Jannik Strötgen. 259-275 [doi]
- A Case Study on the Relevance of the Competence Assumption for Implicature Calculation in Dialogue SystemsJudith Victoria Fischer. 276-283 [doi]
- Supporting Sustainable Process DocumentationMarkus Gärtner, Uli Hahn, Sibylle Hermann. 284-291 [doi]
- Optimizing Visual Representations in Semantic Multi-modal Models with Dimensionality Reduction, Denoising and Contextual InformationMaximilian Köper, Kim Anh Nguyen, Sabine Schulte im Walde. 292-300 [doi]
- Using Argumentative Structure to Grade Persuasive EssaysAndreas Stiegelmayr, Margot Mieskes. 301-308 [doi]