Misplaced Pages

Message Understanding Conference

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page. Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources.
Find sources: "Message Understanding Conference" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (March 2024)

The Message Understanding Conferences (MUC) for computing and computer science, were initiated and financed by DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) to encourage the development of new and better methods of information extraction. The character of this competition, many concurrent research teams competing against one another—required the development of standards for evaluation, e.g. the adoption of metrics like precision and recall.

Topics and exercises

Only for the first conference (MUC-1) could the participant choose the output format for the extracted information. From the second conference the output format, by which the participants' systems would be evaluated, was prescribed. For each topic fields were given, which had to be filled with information from the text. Typical fields were, for example, the cause, the agent, the time and place of an event, the consequences etc. The number of fields increased from conference to conference.

At the sixth conference (MUC-6) the task of recognition of named entities and coreference was added. For named entity all phrases in the text were supposed to be marked as person, location, organization, time or quantity.

The topics and text sources, which were processed, show a continuous move from military to civil themes, which mirrored the change in business interest in information extraction taking place at the time.

Conference Year Text Source Topic (Domain)
MUC-1 1987 Mil. reports Fleet Operations
MUC-2 1989 Mil. reports Fleet Operations
MUC-3 1991 News reports Terrorist activities in Latin America
MUC-4 1992 News reports Terrorist activities in Latin America
MUC-5 1993 News reports Corporate Joint Ventures, Microelectronic production
MUC-6 1995 News reports Negotiation of Labor Disputes and Corporate Management Succession
MUC-7 1997 News reports Airplane crashes, and Rocket/Missile Launches

Literature

See also

External links


Stub icon

This computer science article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: