Semantic MediaWiki (SMW) is a free extension of MediaWiki that helps to search, organise, tag, browse, evaluate, and share the wiki's content. While traditional wikis contain only texts which computers can neither understand nor evaluate, SMW adds semantic annotations that bring the power of the Semantic Web to the wiki.
The objective of the ACE Program is to develop extraction technology to support automatic processing of source language data (in the form of natural text, and as text derived from ASR and OCR). This includes classification, filtering, and selection based on the language content of the source data, i.e., based on the meaning conveyed by the data. Thus the ACE program requires the development of technologies that automatically detect and characterize this meaning. The ACE research objectives are viewed as the detection and characterization of Entities, Relations, and Events.
RelEx, a narrow-AI component of OpenCog, is an English-language semantic relationship extractor, built on the Carnegie-Mellon link parser. It can identify subject, object, indirect object and many other dependency relationships between words in a sentence; it generates dependency trees, resembling those of dependency grammars.
T-Rex (Trainable Relation Extraction) is a highly configurable machine learning-based Information Extraction from Text framework, which includes tools for document classification, entity extraction and relation extraction.
A. Culotta, and J. Sorensen. ACL '04: Proceedings of the 42nd Annual Meeting on Association for Computational Linguistics, page 423. Morristown, NJ, USA, Association for Computational Linguistics, (2004)
D. Roth, and W. tau Yih. HLT-NAACL 2004 Workshop: Eighth Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning (CoNLL-2004), page 1--8. Boston, Massachusetts, USA, Association for Computational Linguistics, (May 2004)
R. Bunescu, and R. Mooney. Proceedings of the Conference on Human Language Technology and Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing (HLT '05), October 6-8, 2005, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, page 724--731. Association for Computational Linguistics Morristown, NJ, USA, (2005)
Z. GuoDong, S. Jian, Z. Jie, and Z. Min. ACL '05: Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting on Association for Computational Linguistics, page 427--434. Morristown, NJ, USA, Association for Computational Linguistics, (2005)
F. Zanzotto, and A. Moschitti. ACL-44: Proceedings of the 21st International Conference on Computational Linguistics and the 44th annual meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics, page 401--408. Morristown, NJ, USA, Association for Computational Linguistics, (2006)
J. Jiang, and C. Zhai. Proceedings of the Annual Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics, page 113--120. Rochester, New York, Association for Computational Linguistics, (April 2007)
M. Wang. Proceedings of the Third International Joint Conference on Natural Language Processing, 2, page 841--846. Hyderabad, India, Asian Federation of Natural Language Processing, Association for Computational Linguistics, (January 2008)
G. Zhou, M. Zhang, D. Ji, and Q. Zhu. Proceedings of the 2007 Joint Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing and Computational Natural Language Learning (EMNLP-CoNLL), page 728--736. (2007)
R. Kate. Proceedings of the conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing (EMNLP-2008), page 400--409. Waikiki, Honolulu, Hawaii, (2008)