60-510 – Assignment#3 - Submitting a list of possible papers for the survey Due date:Friday 30th January email to rfrost@cogeco.ca PART I You should now have identified a survey title which appears to be sufficiently narrow (no more than 100 hits with Google Scholar using a comprehensive set of key words and key phrases). Please create and submit a Microsoft word document (or pdf document from Latex) which contains: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Your name Your email address Your supervisor’s name Your (revised) survey title The keywords and phrases used with Google Scholar Number of hits (references returned) A copy of the result returned by Google Scholar (That is the list of all papers returned by Google Scholar copied directly from the Google Scholar result.) PART II Look through the papers and create a list of “exactly on target” references and add the references to the bottom of document by copying from the Google Scholar results. You should include only those references which appear to be very closely related to your topic. You should copy the entry AND if there is a link to the paper itself on the right hand side of the reference (e.g. [PDF] from rus ec), copy that shortcut and place the link under the reference. For example: Lazy combinators for executable specifications of general attribute grammars R Hafiz, RA Frost - Practical Aspects of Declarative Languages, 2010 - Springer ... However, recognizers constructed with these basic combinators share the shortcomings of naive top-down parsing: 1) they do not terminate for the left- recursive grammars 2) they require exponential time and space ... By definition, a parser produces parse-trees based ... Cited by 12 Related articles All 11 versions Cite Save [PDF] from rus.ec PART III Look through the citations to (i.e.”cited by”) the “exactly-on-target” papers returned by Google Scholar to see if there are any exactly-on-target papers that you should add to your list – add them under the heading “Papers that cite exactly-on-target papers returned by Google Scholar” (do this recursively). Number the references so that Dr. Frost can return comments easily. There should be no more than around 30 papers in the lists in PART II and PART III.. If there are more, you need to talk to your supervisor to narrow your topic. The next few pages contain an example of the contents of the document which you should submit. 60-510 Assignment# 2 PART I 1. Yourname 2. email: youremail 3. Supervisor: your supervisor 4. Title: Query interfaces to binary-relational databases 5. Keyphrases: database “binary-relational” OR “triple store” "natural language query" 6. 42 hits 7. List of 42 references: P1) Ontosearch2: Searching and querying web ontologies JZ Pan, E Thomas, D Sleeman - Proc. of WWW/Internet, 2006 - ontosearch.eu ... of Semantic Web Documents (SWDs), these documents are indexed and stored in a triple store database. ... is also required to maximize the performance of the database subsystem. ... and are investigating ways of linking ONTOSEARCH2 to a natural language query engine which ... Cited by 57 Related articles All 20 versions Cite More P2) Enhancing information systems management with natural language processing techniques E Métais - Data & Knowledge Engineering, 2002 - Elsevier ... SECSI [5] allows defining a MORSE conceptual database schema, from a restricted subset of natural language. In the ANAPURNA project [28] binary relational schema are built from natural language sentences. The ACME ... Cited by 32 Related articles Get at CISTI All 4 versions Cite [PDF] from open.ac.uk P3) Ontology-driven question answering in aqualog V Lopez, E Motta - Natural Language Processing and Information Systems, 2004 - Springer ... long been an area of research in the artificial intelligence and database communities [5 ... that the semantic web will benefit from the availability of natural language query interfaces, which ... 13], although not all possible queries can be represented in the binary relational model, in ... Cited by 35 Related articles Get at CISTI All 13 versions Cite [PDF] from google.com P4) How useful are natural language interfaces to the semantic web for casual endusers? E Kaufmann, A Bernstein - The Semantic Web, 2007 - Springer ... 1).3 When generating the triple store from a knowledge base, NLP-Reduce also ... Its geography database consists of a knowledge base that contains geograph- ical information about ... Dittenbach, M., Merkl, D., Berger, H.: A natural language query interface for tourism information. ... Cited by 93 Related articles Get at CISTI All 22 versions Cite etc. (to include all 42 references) PART II: LIST OF PAPERS THAT ARE EXACTLY ON TARGET (XON) XON 4 How useful are natural language interfaces to the semantic web for casual endusers? E Kaufmann, A Bernstein - The Semantic Web, 2007 - Springer ... 1).3 When generating the triple store from a knowledge base, NLP-Reduce also ... Its geography database consists of a knowledge base that contains geograph- ical information about ... Dittenbach, M., Merkl, D., Berger, H.: A natural language query interface for tourism information. ... Cited by 93 Related articles Get at CISTI All 22 versions Cite http://www.cs.xu.edu/csci390/08s/NLInterfacesUsefulToEndUsers.pdf Note that the link above does not appear explicitly on the results returned by Google Scholar. It is obtained by copying the shortcut “link” [PDF] from xu.edu which appears on the right hand side of the Google results page. etc. to include ALL papers that appear to be exactly on target from the first list. PART III “Exactly-on-target papers that cite exactly-on-target papers returned by Google Scholar” CXON 4 [PDF] Talking to the semantic web: natural language query interfaces for casual end-users E Kaufmann, A Bernstein, M Hess - 2008 - ifi.uzh.ch Abstract The Semantic Web presents the vision of a distributed, dynamically growing knowledge base founded on formal logic. This formal framework facilitates precise and effective querying in order to manage information-seeking tasks. Casual end-users, ... Cited by 10 Related articles All 4 versions Cite More http://www.ifi.uzh.ch/pax/uploads/pdf/publication/1384/Kaufmann_2007.pdf etc for all exactly-on-target papers that cite exactly on target papers (recursively). Note that the first list of papers are “numbered” P1, P2 etc. , whereas the second list are numbered XON4 etc., and the third lists are numbered CXON4 etc. indicating that paper XON4 is paper P4 from the first list identified as a possible exactly-on-target paper, and that the paper CXON 4 is an exactly-on-target paper that cited paper XON4. Dr Frost will then review your lists and return comments through email NOTE: You are encouraged to use Latex if possible, by creating a .tex and a .bib files. The instructions are on the 60-510 website at: http://richard.myweb.cs.uwindsor.ca/cs510/index.html