The GENIA corpus is the primary collection of biomedical literature compiled and annotated within the scope of the GENIA project. The corpus was created to support the development and evaluation of information extraction and text mining systems for the domain of molecular biology.
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ACE 2005 Multilingual Training Corpus contains the complete set of English, Arabic and Chinese training data for the 2005 Automatic Content Extraction (ACE) technology evaluation. The corpus consists of data of various types annotated for entities, relations and events by the Linguistic Data Consortium (LDC) with support from the ACE Program and additional assistance from LDC.
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ACE 2004 Multilingual Training Corpus contains the complete set of English, Arabic and Chinese training data for the 2004 Automatic Content Extraction (ACE) technology evaluation. The corpus consists of data of various types annotated for entities and relations and was created by Linguistic Data Consortium with support from the ACE Program, with additional assistance from the DARPA TIDES (Translingual Information Detection, Extraction and Summarization) Program. The objective of the ACE program is to develop automatic content extraction technology to support automatic processing of human language in text form. In September 2004, sites were evaluated on system performance in six areas: Entity Detection and Recognition (EDR), Entity Mention Detection (EMD), EDR Co-reference, Relation Detection and Recognition (RDR), Relation Mention Detection (RMD), and RDR given reference entities. All tasks were evaluated in three languages: English, Chinese and Arabic.
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NNE is a dataset for Nested Named Entity Recognition in English Newswire
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GUM is an open source multilayer English corpus of richly annotated texts from twelve text types. Annotations include:
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AMALGUM is a machine annotated multilayer corpus following the same design and annotation layers as GUM, but substantially larger (around 4M tokens). The goal of this corpus is to close the gap between high quality, richly annotated, but small datasets, and the larger but shallowly annotated corpora that are often scraped from the Web.
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The Chilean Waiting List corpus comprises de-identified referrals from the waiting list in Chilean public hospitals. A subset of 10,000 referrals (including medical and dental notes) was manually annotated with ten entity types with clinical relevance, keeping 1,000 annotations for a future shared task. A trained medical doctor or dentist annotated these referrals and then, together with three other researchers, consolidated each of the annotations. The annotated corpus has more than 48% of entities embedded in other entities or containing another. This corpus can be a useful resource to build new models for Nested Named Entity Recognition (NER). This work constitutes the first annotated corpus using clinical narratives from Chile and one of the few in Spanish.
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DaN+ is a new multi-domain corpus and annotation guidelines for Danish nested named entities (NEs) and lexical normalization to support research on cross-lingual cross-domain learning for a less-resourced language.
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LegalNERo is a manually annotated corpus for named entity recognition in the Romanian legal domain. It provides gold annotations for organizations, locations, persons, time and legal resources mentioned in legal documents. Additionally it offers GEONAMES codes for the named entities annotated as location (where a link could be established).
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Named Entity (NER) annotations of the Hebrew Treebank (Haaretz newspaper) corpus, including: morpheme and token level NER labels, nested mentions, and more. We publish the NEMO corpus in the TACL paper "Neural Modeling for Named Entities and Morphology (NEMO^2)" [1], where we use it in extensive experiments and analyses, showing the importance of morphological boundaries for neural modeling of NER in morphologically rich languages. Code for these models and experiments can be found in the NEMO code repo.
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A vast amount of information in the biomedical domain is available as natural language free text. An increasing number of documents in the field are written in languages other than English. Therefore, it is essential to develop resources, methods and tools that address Natural Language Processing in the variety of languages used by the biomedical community. In this paper, we report on the development of an extensive corpus of biomedical documents in French annotated at the entity and concept level. Three text genres are covered, comprising a total of 103,056 words. Ten entity categories corresponding to UMLS Semantic Groups were annotated, using automatic pre-annotations validated by trained human annotators. The pre-annotation method was found helful for entities and achieved above 0.83 precision for all text genres. Overall, a total of 26,409 entity annotations were mapped to 5,797 unique UMLS concepts.
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