Release of BabelNet 4.0

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   RELEASE OF BABELNET 4.0

               http://babelnet.org

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We are proud to announce the release of a new major version of BabelNet
<http://babelnet.org> and its API, developed jointly by the Linguistic
Computing Laboratory <http://lcl.uniroma1.it> of the Sapienza University of
Rome under the supervision of prof. Roberto Navigli
<http://wwwusers.di.uniroma1.it/~navigli/>, and Babelscape
<http://babelscape.com>, a Sapienza startup company providing innovative
solutions for multilingual NLP. BabelNet -- winner of the prominent paper
award 2017 from the Artificial Intelligence Journal and the META prize 2015,
and covered in media such as The Guardian
<https://www.theguardian.com/news/2018/feb/23/oxford-english-dictionary-can-worlds-biggest-dictionary-survive-internet>
and Time magazine
<http://wwwusers.di.uniroma1.it/~navigli/img/Redefining_the_modern_dictionary.png>
-- is today’s most far-reaching multilingual resource which, according to
need, can be used as an encyclopedic dictionary, or a semantic network or a
huge knowledge base. BabelNet was created by means of the seamless
interlinking and integration of the largest multilingual Web encyclopedia -
i.e., Wikipedia - with the most popular computational lexicon of English -
i.e., WordNet, and other lexical semantic resources such as Wiktionary,
OmegaWiki, Wikidata, Wikipedia infoboxes, dozens of wordnets, Wikiquote,
FrameNet, VerbNet, Microsoft Terminology, GeoNames, and ImageNet. BabelNet
provides multilingual synsets, i.e., concepts and named entities
lexicalized in many languages and connected with large amounts of semantic
relations.

Version 4.0 comes with the following features:


   -

   284 languages now covered
   -

   Wikipedia, Wiktionary, Wikidata and OmegaWiki have been updated thanks
   to BabelNet live <http://live.babelnet.org>, a continuously-growing
   resource with daily updates from all the sources that go to make it up
   -

   Better sense inventory thanks to the manual validation of thousands of
   mappings
   -

   All existing wordnets updated
   -

   New wordnets integrated for Gaelic, Portuguese and Korean
   -

   Improved treatment of Chinese
   -

   2 million new multilingual synsets (from 14 in v3.7 to 16 million
   synsets in v4)
   -

   832 million senses (was 745 million Babel senses in v3.7, increasing
   language coverage considerably)
   -

   Improved management of open wordnets that are now stored with their
   individual licenses
   -

   Improved version of the Java and HTTP RESTful API (
   http://babelnet.org/download). The Java API comes with reengineered
   interfaces and classes, additional methods for Java 8 and a Java 9-ready
   packaging, support of the latest version of Lucene. Universal POS tags are
   now adopted, paving the way to synsets for closed-class words. A brand-new
   Python API is under development with the same interface as the Java API.


More statistics are available at: <http://babelnet.org/stats.jsp>
http://babelnet.org/stats.

We are organizing a two-day summer school
<http://live.babelnet.org/search?word=summer+school&lang=EN> and hackathon
<http://live.babelnet.org/synset?word=hackathon&lang=EN&details=1&orig=hackathon>,
with tutorials, interactive sessions and presentations targeting
computational linguists, computer scientists, linguists and, more in
general, BabelNet fans. We are gathering interest and preferences: if you
are potentially interested, just fill in the form
<https://goo.gl/forms/vbHXLmiwQ6RQtR433>! The workshop will be held either
in Rome or Venice (to be decided: vote for it!).

Kind regards,

The BabelNet team


-- 
=====================================
Roberto Navigli
Dipartimento di Informatica
Sapienza University of Rome
Viale Regina Elena 295b (building G, second floor)
00161 Roma Italy
Phone: +39 0649255161 - Fax: +39 06 49918301
Home Page: http://wwwusers.di.uniroma1.it/~navigli
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Received on Wednesday, 28 February 2018 07:37:30 UTC