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Automatic content extraction
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Automatic content extraction (ACE) is a research program for developing advanced information extraction technologies convened by the NIST from 1999 to 2008, succeeding MUC and preceding Text Analysis Conference.
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Topics and exercises
Given a text in natural language, the ACE challenge is to detect:
- entities mentioned in the text, such as: persons, organizations, locations, facilities, weapons, vehicles, and geo-political entities.
- relations between entities, such as: person A is the manager of company B.
- events mentioned in the text, such as: interaction, movement, transfer, creation and destruction.
The program relates to English, Arabic and Chinese texts.
The ACE corpus is one of the standard benchmarks for testing new information extraction algorithms.
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References
- George Doddington@NIS T, Alexis Mitchell@LD C, Mark Przybocki@NIS T, Lance Ramshaw@BB N, Stephanie Strassel@LD C, Ralph Weischedel@BB N. The automatic content extraction (ACE) program–tasks, data, and evaluation. 2004
External links
- MUC - ACE's predecessor.
- ACE Archived 2013-09-25 at the Wayback Machine (LDC)
- ACE (NIST)
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