Sunday, January 9, 2011

Computational Linguistics - for free!!

Hats off to Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL) & MIT Press for making the excellent journal Computational Linguistics FREE!

That's right. You heard right. It's free. Under the banner of an Open Access Journal, and thanks to the support of the ACL, you can now access a lot of groundbreaking articles from the 'noughties' whenever, wherever via your internet-connected device of choice. (For more on ACL's commitment to Open Access for proceedings and journals see the ACL Anthology.)

Below are a few mouth-watering samples from areas that interest me to get you browsing. In just a few minutes you should find something that relates to your field, and you can be sure of the highest standards of work.
Volume 36, Issue 4 - December 2010

Obituary


Fred Jelinek
Mark Liberman
Computational Linguistics December 2010, Vol. 36, No. 4: 595–599.

ACL Lifetime Achievement Award
The Right Tools: Reflections on Computation and Language
William A. Woods
Computational Linguistics December 2010, Vol. 36, No. 4: 601–630.

Squibs
An Asymptotic Model for the English Hapax/Vocabulary Ratio
Fan Fengxiang
Computational Linguistics December 2010, Vol. 36, No. 4: 631–637.

On Paraphrase and Coreference
Marta Recasens, Marta Vila
Computational Linguistics December 2010, Vol. 36, No. 4: 639–647.

Articles
String-to-Dependency Statistical Machine Translation
Libin Shen, Jinxi Xu, Ralph Weischedel
Computational Linguistics December 2010, Vol. 36, No. 4: 649–671.

Distributional Memory: A General Framework for Corpus-Based Semantics
Marco Baroni, Alessandro Lenci
Computational Linguistics December 2010, Vol. 36, No. 4: 673–721.

A Flexible, Corpus-Driven Model of Regular and Inverse Selectional Preferences
Katrin Erk, Sebastian Padó, Ulrike Padó
Computational Linguistics December 2010, Vol. 36, No. 4: 723–763.

Book Review

Introduction to Linguistic Annotation and Text Analytics Graham Wilcock (University of Helsinki) Princeton, NJ: Morgan & Claypool (Synthesis Lectures on Human Language Technologies, edited by Graeme Hirst, volume 2, No. 1), 2009, x+149 pp; paperbound, ISBN 978-1-59829-738-6, $40.00; ebook, ISBN 978-1-59829-739-3, $30.00 or by subscription
Udo Hahn
Computational Linguistics December 2010, Vol. 36, No. 4: 765–766.

Natural Language Processing with Python Steven Bird, Ewan Klein, and Edward Loper (University of Melbourne, University of Edinburgh, and BBN Technologies) Sebastopol, CA: O'Reilly Media, 2009, xx+482 pp; paperbound, ISBN 978-0-596-51649-9, $44.99; on-line free of charge at nltk.org/book
Michael Elhadad
Computational Linguistics December 2010, Vol. 36, No. 4: 767–771.

Statistical Machine Translation Philipp Koehn (University of Edinburgh) Cambridge University Press, 2010, xii+433 pp; ISBN 978-0-521-87415-1, $60.00
Colin Cherry
Computational Linguistics December 2010, Vol. 36, No. 4: 773–776.

Introduction to Chinese Natural Language Processing Kam-Fai Wong, Wenjie Li, Ruifeng Xu, and Zheng-sheng Zhang (Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, City University of Hong Kong, and San Diego State University) Princeton, NJ: Morgan & Claypool (Synthesis Lectures on Human Language Technologies, edited by Graeme Hirst, volume 4), 2010, x+148 pp; paperbound, ISBN 978-1-59829-932-8, $40.00; e-book, ISBN 978-1-59829-933-5, $30.00 or by subscription
Min Zhang
Computational Linguistics December 2010, Vol. 36, No. 4: 777–780.

Spoken Dialogue Systems Kristiina Jokinen and Michael McTear (University of Helsinki, University of Ulster) Princeton, NJ: Morgan & Claypool (Synthesis Lectures on Language Technologies, edited by Graeme Hirst, volume 5), 2009, xiv+151pp; paperback, ISBN 978-1-59829-599-3, $40.00; ebook, ISBN 978-1-59829-600-6, doi 10.2200/S00204ED1V01Y200910HLT005, $30.00 or by subscription
Mary Ellen Foster
Computational Linguistics December 2010, Vol. 36, No. 4: 781–783.

Machine-Aided Linguistic Discovery: An Introduction and Some Examples Vladimir Pericliev (Bulgarian Academy of Sciences) London: Equinox, 2010, ix+330 pp; hardbound, ISBN 978-1-84553-660-2, $90.00, £60.00
Eric J. M. Smith
Computational Linguistics December 2010, Vol. 36, No. 4: 785–787.

Briefly Noted
Essential Programming for Linguistics
Martin Weisser
Computational Linguistics December 2010, Vol. 36, No. 4: 789–789.

Commentary and Discussion
A Response to Richard Sproat on Random Systems, Writing, and Entropy
Rob Lee, Philip Jonathan, Pauline Ziman
Computational Linguistics December 2010, Vol. 36, No. 4: 791–794.

Entropy, the Indus Script, and Language:A Reply to R. Sproat
Rajesh P. N. Rao, Nisha Yadav, Mayank N. Vahia, Hrishikesh Joglekar, Ronojoy Adhikari, Iravatham Mahadevan
Computational Linguistics December 2010, Vol. 36, No. 4: 795–805.

Reply to Rao et al. and Lee et al.
Richard Sproat
Computational Linguistics December 2010, Vol. 36, No. 4: 807–816.

Last Words
Are We Near the End of the Journal?
Nat Lang
Computational Linguistics December 2010, Vol. 36, No. 4: 817–821.

Reviewers
Reviewers for Volume 36
Computational Linguistics December 2010, Vol. 36, No. 4: 823–823.

2 comments:

  1. Hats off to MIT Press for making the excellent journal Computational Linguistics FREE!

    Credit where credit is due, please. It's not The MIT Press that made the journal available free but the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL), which is the owner of the journal and on whose behalf MIT Press publishes it. The ACL pays all the costs of publication (which are quite substantial).

    The ACL has long been committed to open access publishing, and has for many years made all its conference proceedings available to all, along with older issues of Computational Linguistics. Recent changes have enabled the organization to extend this to current issues of the journal as well.

    The complete ACL Anthology is available at http://www.aclweb.org/anthology-new

    -- Graeme Hirst, Treasurer, Association for Computational Linguistics

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks to Graeme's comments, the post was revised to reflect the role of ACL, and also provided the link to ACL's anthology

    ReplyDelete