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Automatic acknowledgement indexing

Proceedings of the 3rd international conference on Knowledge capture, 2005
Acknowledgements in research publications, like citations, indicate influential contributions to scientific work; however, large-scale acknowledgement analyses have traditionally been impractical due to the high cost of manual information extraction.
Isaac G. Councill   +3 more
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Automatically indexing documents

Proceedings of the 7th international conference on Intelligent user interfaces - IUI '02, 2002
Authors cite other work in many types of documents. Notable among these are research papers and web pages. Recently, several researchers have proposed using the text surrounding citations (references) as a means of automatically indexing documents for search engines, claiming that this technique is superior to indexing documents based on their content [
Shannon Bradshaw, Kristian Hammond
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Automatic indexing of pathology data

Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 1978
AbstractA procedure for automated indexing of pathology diagnostic reports at the National Institutes of Health is described. Diagnostic statements in medical English are encoded by computer into the Systematized Nomenclature of Pathology (SNOP). SNOP is a structured indexing language constructed by pathologists for manual indexing.
G S, Dunham, M G, Pacak, A W, Pratt
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Automatic indexing

Proceedings of the ACM 1980 annual conference on - ACM 80, 1980
In information retrieval and text processing systems the search requests and stored information items are normally represented by sets of content identifiers, known as keywords or index terms. The choice of effective indexing products designed accurately to reflect document content is by far the most crucial task in retrieval.
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Automatic indexing

ACM SIGIR Forum, 1982
SIGIR, from its very onset in the early 1960's, has been concerned with the development of automatic information retrieval systems and with improving the effectiveness of automatic indexing. Automatic indexing is a subsystem, or component, of an automatic information retrieval system.
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AUTOMATIC INDEXING

Journal of Documentation, 1974
This article reviews the state of the art in automatic indexing, that is, automatic techniques for analysing and characterising documents, for manipulating their descriptions in searching, and for generating the index language used for these purposes. It concentrates on the literature from 1968 to 1973.
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Automatic indexing

Proceedings of the ACM '81 conference on - ACM 81, 1981
One of the first projects in computer analysis of natural language was to devise procedures for representing the subject content of a document by a few text-derived terms, a process called automatic indexing. Although many developments have taken place over the years, the essential techniques of automatic indexing continue to focus on answering three ...
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Automatic versus manual indexing

Information Processing & Management, 1977
Abstract A comparative evaluation has been carried out on the Philips “DIRECT” and the British “INSPEC” retrieval system. DIRECT is based on automatic indexing whereas INSPEC uses manual subject indexing. Two queries were submitted to both systems, using the same data base. The results are expressed in terms of recall and precision.
W.A. van der Meulen, P.J.F.C. Janssen
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FULLY AUTOMATIC BOOK INDEXING

Journal of Documentation, 1983
The Fully Automatic Syntactically‐based Indexing of Text (FASIT) system represents the contents of a document without a full parse or semantic analysis of the text. Content‐bearing units are isolated and then grouped into quasi‐synonymous classes whose main term is used to index the document.
MARTIN DILLON, LAURA K. MCDONALD
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TOWARDS AUTOMATIC INDEXING: AUTOMATIC ASSIGNMENT OF CONTROLLED‐LANGUAGE INDEXING AND CLASSIFICATION FROM FREE INDEXING

Journal of Documentation, 1975
A number of techniques have been studied for the automatic assignment of controlled subject headings and classifications from free indexing. These techniques involve the automatic manipulation and truncation of the free‐index phrases assigned to a document and the use of a manually‐constructed thesaurus and automatically‐generated dictionaries together
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