Search for dissertations about: "Annotation"
Showing result 11 - 15 of 147 swedish dissertations containing the word Annotation.
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11. The Multilingual Forest : Investigating High-quality Parallel Corpus Development
Abstract : This thesis explores the development of parallel treebanks, collections of language data consisting of texts and their translations, with syntactic annotation and alignment, linking words, phrases, and sentences to show translation equivalence. We describe the semi-manual annotation of the SMULTRON parallel treebank, consisting of 1,000 sentences in English, German and Swedish. READ MORE
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12. Annotating and making use of the Avena sativa cv. Sang reference genome
Abstract : Oats is an important cereal used for both food and feed. The topic of this thesis is the annotation of the genome of oat (Avena sativa) cv. Sang, as well as some of the things this genome and its annotation have been used for. READ MORE
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13. Probalistic Methods In Genomic Data Analysis
Abstract : In this thesis, three aspects of gene expression data analysis are discussed: Differential gene expression is addressed by a probabilistic method. Gene annotation enrichment analysis is discussed in the context of multiple hypothesis testing and the choice of null hypothesis. READ MORE
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14. Bayesian Models for Multilingual Word Alignment
Abstract : In this thesis I explore Bayesian models for word alignment, how they can be improved through joint annotation transfer, and how they can be extended to parallel texts in more than two languages. In addition to these general methodological developments, I apply the algorithms to problems from sign language research and linguistic typology. READ MORE
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15. Interpretation and Alignment of 2D Indoor Maps : Towards a Heterogeneous Map Representation
Abstract : Mobile robots are increasingly being used in automation solutions with notable examples in service robots, such as home-care, and warehouses. Autonomy of mobile robots is particularly challenging, since their work space is not deterministic, known a priori, or fully predictable. READ MORE