What Did This Castle Look like before? Exploring Referential Relations in Naturally Occurring Multimodal Texts

Utescher R, Zarrieß S (2021)
In: Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Beyond Vision and LANguage: inTEgrating Real-world kNowledge (LANTERN). Kyiv, Ukraine: Association for Computational Linguistics: 53-60.

Konferenzbeitrag | Englisch
 
Download
Es wurden keine Dateien hochgeladen. Nur Publikationsnachweis!
Abstract / Bemerkung
Multi-modal texts are abundant and diverse in structure, yet Language {\&} Vision research of these naturally occurring texts has mostly focused on genres that are comparatively light on text, like tweets. In this paper, we discuss the challenges and potential benefits of a L{\&}V framework that explicitly models referential relations, taking Wikipedia articles about buildings as an example. We briefly survey existing related tasks in L{\&}V and propose multi-modal information extraction as a general direction for future research.
Erscheinungsjahr
2021
Titel des Konferenzbandes
Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Beyond Vision and LANguage: inTEgrating Real-world kNowledge (LANTERN)
Seite(n)
53-60
Konferenz
LANTERN - The Third Workshop Beyond Vision and Language: Integrating Real World Knowledge
Konferenzort
virtual
Konferenzdatum
2021-04-19 – 2021-04-20
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2955815

Zitieren

Utescher R, Zarrieß S. What Did This Castle Look like before? Exploring Referential Relations in Naturally Occurring Multimodal Texts. In: Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Beyond Vision and LANguage: inTEgrating Real-world kNowledge (LANTERN). Kyiv, Ukraine: Association for Computational Linguistics; 2021: 53-60.
Utescher, R., & Zarrieß, S. (2021). What Did This Castle Look like before? Exploring Referential Relations in Naturally Occurring Multimodal Texts. Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Beyond Vision and LANguage: inTEgrating Real-world kNowledge (LANTERN), 53-60. Kyiv, Ukraine: Association for Computational Linguistics.
Utescher, Ronja, and Zarrieß, Sina. 2021. “What Did This Castle Look like before? Exploring Referential Relations in Naturally Occurring Multimodal Texts”. In Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Beyond Vision and LANguage: inTEgrating Real-world kNowledge (LANTERN), 53-60. Kyiv, Ukraine: Association for Computational Linguistics.
Utescher, R., and Zarrieß, S. (2021). “What Did This Castle Look like before? Exploring Referential Relations in Naturally Occurring Multimodal Texts” in Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Beyond Vision and LANguage: inTEgrating Real-world kNowledge (LANTERN) (Kyiv, Ukraine: Association for Computational Linguistics), 53-60.
Utescher, R., & Zarrieß, S., 2021. What Did This Castle Look like before? Exploring Referential Relations in Naturally Occurring Multimodal Texts. In Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Beyond Vision and LANguage: inTEgrating Real-world kNowledge (LANTERN). Kyiv, Ukraine: Association for Computational Linguistics, pp. 53-60.
R. Utescher and S. Zarrieß, “What Did This Castle Look like before? Exploring Referential Relations in Naturally Occurring Multimodal Texts”, Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Beyond Vision and LANguage: inTEgrating Real-world kNowledge (LANTERN), Kyiv, Ukraine: Association for Computational Linguistics, 2021, pp.53-60.
Utescher, R., Zarrieß, S.: What Did This Castle Look like before? Exploring Referential Relations in Naturally Occurring Multimodal Texts. Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Beyond Vision and LANguage: inTEgrating Real-world kNowledge (LANTERN). p. 53-60. Association for Computational Linguistics, Kyiv, Ukraine (2021).
Utescher, Ronja, and Zarrieß, Sina. “What Did This Castle Look like before? Exploring Referential Relations in Naturally Occurring Multimodal Texts”. Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Beyond Vision and LANguage: inTEgrating Real-world kNowledge (LANTERN). Kyiv, Ukraine: Association for Computational Linguistics, 2021. 53-60.

Link(s) zu Volltext(en)
Access Level
OA Open Access

Export

Markieren/ Markierung löschen
Markierte Publikationen

Open Data PUB

Suchen in

Google Scholar