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    From: bayan abu shawar <bshawar@comp.leeds.ac.uk>
    Subject: Re: [Corpora-List] Does anybody know a classified faq
      collection?
    Cc: CORPORA@UIB.NO
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    Dear all,
    I am sorry that it is too late to reply, but It may be useful to any one,
    according to the FAQ, FAQchat is another tool to access FAQ database, where
    the input is a question and the answer is either a direct one, or links to
    related answers. The process is similar to the information retrieval. For
    more details read the GLDV05 from my web page: www.comp.leeds.ac.uk/bshawar.

    There are a lot of ways for retrieving answers automatically:

    Dumais, S., Banko, M., Brill, E., Lin, J., and Ng, A. (2002). Web question
    answering: is more always better?. In Proceedings of the 25th Annual
    International ACM SIGIR Conference on Research and Development in
    Information Retrieval. (SIGIR 2002). Tempere, Finland, pp. 291-298.

    Costello, F. and Smeaton, A. (2004). Question-Answering Systems. [Online]:
    http://www.computing.dcu.ie/~away/PROJ3/00-01/lenehan.html

    Kwok, C., Etzioni, O., and S.Weld, D. (2001). Scaling question answering to
    the web. ACM Transcations on Information Systems. Vol. 19, No.3, pp. 242-262.

    Katz, B. (1997). From sentence processing to information access on the
    World Wide Web. In Natural Language Processing for the World Wide Web:
    papers from the 1997 AAAI Spring Symposium, pp. 77-94.

    Hopefully this is useful
    Bayan Abu Shawar
    School of Computing
    University of Leeds

    At 22:06 16/05/2005 +0100, Eric Atwell wrote:
    >Ling,
    >
    >I don't know of a FAQ collection classified according to your preferred
    >semantic classes, but there are plenty of FAQ websites whcih you could
    >trawl to collect your own corpus. For example, the language of the FAQ
    >of Leeds University School of Computing http://www.comp.leeds.ac.uk/faq
    >is used as a Corpus in:
    >
    >Abu Shawar, Bayan; Atwell, Eric. A chatbot system as a tool to animate a
    >corpus. to appear in ICAME Journal, vol. 29, pp. 5-24. 2005
    >
    >We couldnt find any standards for FAQ structure or analysis whcih applied
    >across a wide range of FAQ websites; so please let us see your analysis
    >results when you've finished :-)
    >
    >Eric Atwell, Leeds University (pp Bayan Abu Shawar)
    >
    >
    >On Mon, 16 May 2005, Ling Yin wrote:
    >
    >>Dear all,
    >>
    >> I am studying relationships between different parts of a topic
    >>expression and different discourse constituencies (the theme/rheme
    >>distinction covered by information structure theory). Instead of using a
    >>collection of aligned topics and discourses, I plan to use a collection
    >>of frequent asked questions (FAQs). Here I take a question as a topic
    >>expression and the answer as a disourse on the topic. Can anybody
    >>provide a faq collection (preferably classified according to semantic
    >>classes such as definitional, procedural and causal)?
    >>
    >> Please also tell me if you know a document collection with
    >>annotated information structure or a system which does such annotation
    >>automaticall.
    >>
    >> Thanks in advance!
    >>
    >>Ling
    >
    >--
    >Eric Atwell, Senior Lecturer, Computer Vision and Language research group,
    >School of Computing, University of Leeds, LEEDS LS2 9JT, England
    >TEL: +44-113-2335430 FAX: +44-113-2335468 http://www.comp.leeds.ac.uk/eric

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    Content-Type: text/html; charset="us-ascii"

    <html>
    Dear all,<br>
    I am sorry that it is too late to reply, but It may be useful to any one,
    according to the FAQ, FAQchat is another tool to access FAQ database,
    where the input is a question and the answer is either a direct one, or
    links to related answers. The process is similar to the information
    retrieval. For more details read the GLDV05 from my web page:
    <a href="http://www.comp.leeds.ac.uk/bshawar" eudora="autourl"><font color="#0000FF"><u>www.comp.leeds.ac.uk/bshawar</a></u></font>.<br><br>
    There are a lot of ways for retrieving answers automatically:<br><br>
    <font face="Times New Roman, Times"><b>Dumais, S., Banko, M., Brill, E.,
    Lin, J., and Ng, A.</b> (2002). Web question answering: is more always
    better?. In <i>Proceedings of the
    25</font><font face="Times New Roman, Times" size=1><sup>th</sup></font><font face="Times New Roman, Times">
    Annual International ACM SIGIR Conference on Research and Development in
    Information Retrieval. (SIGIR 2002).</i> Tempere, Finland, pp.
    291-298.<b> <br><br>
    Costello, F. and Smeaton, A.</b> (2004). <i>Question-Answering
    Systems</i>. [Online]:
    </font><a href="http://www.computing.dcu.ie/~away/PROJ3/00-01/lenehan.html" eudora="autourl"><font face="Times New Roman, Times" color="#0000FF"><u>http://www.computing.dcu.ie/~away/PROJ3/00-01/lenehan.html></u></font><font face="Times New Roman, Times"><b>
    <br><br>
    Kwok, C., Etzioni, O., and S.Weld, D. (2001). </b>Scaling question
    answering to the web. <i>ACM Transcations on Information Systems</i>.
    Vol. 19, No.3, pp. 242-262.<b> <br><br>
    </font>Katz, B. (1997). </b>From sentence processing to information
    access on the World Wide Web.<b> </b>In Natural Language <i>Processing
    for the World Wide Web: papers from the 1997 AAAI Spring Symposium</i>,
    pp. 77-94.<br><br>
    Hopefully this is useful<br>
    Bayan Abu Shawar<br>
    School of Computing<br>
    University of Leeds<br><br>
    At 22:06 16/05/2005 +0100, Eric Atwell wrote:<br>
    <blockquote type=cite class=cite cite>Ling,<br><br>
    I don't know of a FAQ collection classified according to your
    preferred<br>
    semantic classes, but there are plenty of FAQ websites whcih you could
    trawl to collect your own corpus. For example, the language of the
    FAQ<br>
    of Leeds University School of Computing
    <a href="
    http://www.comp.leeds.ac.uk/faq" eudora="autourl">http://www.comp.leeds.ac.uk/faq><br>
    is used as a Corpus in:<br><br>
    Abu Shawar, Bayan; Atwell, Eric. A chatbot system as a tool to animate
    a<br>
    corpus. to appear in ICAME Journal, vol. 29, pp. 5-24. 2005<br><br>
    We couldnt find any standards for FAQ structure or analysis whcih applied
    across a wide range of FAQ websites; so please let us see your analysis
    results when you've finished :-)<br><br>
    Eric Atwell, Leeds University (pp Bayan Abu Shawar)<br><br>
    <br>
    On Mon, 16 May 2005, Ling Yin wrote:<br><br>
    <blockquote type=cite class=cite cite>Dear all,<br><br>
    &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I am studying relationships between
    different parts of a topic<br>
    expression and different discourse constituencies (the theme/rheme<br>
    distinction covered by information structure theory). Instead of using
    a<br>
    collection of aligned topics and discourses, I plan to use a
    collection<br>
    of frequent asked questions (FAQs). Here I take a question as a
    topic<br>
    expression and the answer as a disourse on the topic. Can anybody<br>
    provide a faq collection (preferably classified according to
    semantic<br>
    classes such as definitional, procedural and causal)?<br><br>
    &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Please also tell me if you know a document
    collection with<br>
    annotated information structure or a system which does such
    annotation<br>
    automaticall.<br><br>
    &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Thanks in advance!<br><br>
    Ling<br>
    </blockquote><br>
    -- <br>
    Eric Atwell, Senior Lecturer, Computer Vision and Language research
    group,<br>
    School of Computing, University of Leeds, LEEDS LS2 9JT, England<br>
    TEL: +44-113-2335430&nbsp; FAX: +44-113-2335468&nbsp;
    <a href="
    http://www.comp.leeds.ac.uk/eric" eudora="autourl">http://www.comp.leeds.ac.uk/eric></blockquote><br>
    </html>

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