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| Detekcija spekulacija× | Prepoznavanje imenovanih entiteta (NER)× | |
|---|---|---|
| Oblast | Rudarenje teksta | Rudarenje teksta |
| Porodica | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Godina nastanka≠ | 1996 (lexicon approach); 2010 (CoNLL shared task) | — |
| Tvorac≠ | Hyland, K. (lexicon-based framing, 1996); Farkas et al. (shared-task benchmark, 2010) | — |
| Tip≠ | NLP text-classification task | NLP sequence-labelling task |
| Temeljni izvor≠ | Hyland, K. (1996). Writing Without Conviction? Hedging in Science Research Articles. Applied Linguistics, 17(4), 433-454. DOI ↗ | Nadeau, D. & Sekine, S. (2007). A survey of named entity recognition. Lingvisticae Investigationes. link ↗ |
| Drugi nazivi≠ | hedging detection, epistemic modality analysis, hedge detection, Belirsizlik / Spekülasyon Tespiti (Hedging) | NER, entity tagging, Adlandırılmış Varlık Tanıma (NER) |
| Srodne≠ | 5 | 3 |
| Sažetak≠ | Speculation detection, also known as hedging analysis, is a natural-language-processing task that identifies epistemic uncertainty markers — words and phrases such as 'may', 'possibly', 'it is suggested that' — within scientific, biomedical, and news texts. Formalised by Hyland (1996) for scientific writing and benchmarked by the CoNLL-2010 shared task, the method reveals where authors signal incomplete knowledge, tentativeness, or distance from a claim rather than asserting facts directly. | Named entity recognition (NER) is a natural-language-processing task that automatically detects and labels entities in text — such as people, organisations, locations, and dates. Surveyed by Nadeau and Sekine (2007) and later advanced with neural architectures by Lample et al. (2016), it turns free-running text into tagged spans that downstream tools can use. |
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