TY - BOOK AU - Schilder,Frank AU - Katz,Graham AU - Pustejovsky,James ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - Annotating, Extracting and Reasoning about Time and Events: International Seminar, Dagstuhl Castle, Germany, April 10-15, 2005. Revised Papers T2 - Lecture Notes in Computer Science, SN - 9783540759898 AV - Q334-342 U1 - 006.3 23 PY - 2007/// CY - Berlin, Heidelberg PB - Springer Berlin Heidelberg KW - Computer science KW - Data mining KW - Information storage and retrieval systems KW - Artificial intelligence KW - Text processing (Computer science KW - Computer Science KW - Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics) KW - Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery KW - Information Storage and Retrieval KW - Document Preparation and Text Processing KW - Mathematical Logic and Formal Languages N1 - Annotating, Extracting and Reasoning About Time and Events -- Drawing TimeML Relations with TBox -- Text Type and the Position of a Temporal Adverbial Within the Sentence -- Effective Use of TimeBank for TimeML Analysis -- Event Extraction and Temporal Reasoning in Legal Documents -- Computational Treatment of Temporal Notions: The CTTN–System -- Towards a Denotational Semantics for TimeML -- Arguments in TimeML: Events and Entities -- Chronoscopes: A Theory of Underspecified Temporal Representations N2 - The Dagstuhl Seminar 05151 “Annotating, Extracting and Reasoning about Time and Events” took place April 10–15, 2005 at the International Conference and Research Center (IBFI), Schloss Dagstuhl, Germany. During the seminar, 17 leading researchers from 5 di?erent countries presented current research and discussed open problems concerning annotation, temporal reasoning, and event identi?cation. The work presented at this seminar, together with other previous andongoingresearch,centersaroundanemergingde factostandardfortime and event annotation: TimeML. TimeML has recently been adopted as a candidate for an ISO standard, and is currently being reviewed in this capacity. At the seminar, the discussions focussed on the following three Time- related issues: using the TimeML language e?ectively for consistent annotation, determining how useful such annotation is for further processing,and describing modi?cations that should be applied to the standard for applications such as question-answering and information retrieval. Discussions at the Dagstuhl Seminar led to new researchideas, and a variety ofpublicationsandconferenceandworkshoppresentationsresulted.Thiscurrent collection of papers adds to the growing body of work on TimeML. It focusses on important sub-areas within TimeML research such as temporal annotation and temporal reasoning and points to future research directions that are crucial for further progress UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-75989-8 ER -