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Rion Snow

Researcher at Stanford University

Publications -  15
Citations -  7132

Rion Snow is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: WordNet & Textual entailment. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 15 publications receiving 6516 citations. Previous affiliations of Rion Snow include Twitter & University of California, San Diego.

Papers
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Distant supervision for relation extraction without labeled data

TL;DR: This work investigates an alternative paradigm that does not require labeled corpora, avoiding the domain dependence of ACE-style algorithms, and allowing the use of corpora of any size.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Cheap and Fast -- But is it Good? Evaluating Non-Expert Annotations for Natural Language Tasks

TL;DR: This work explores the use of Amazon's Mechanical Turk system, a significantly cheaper and faster method for collecting annotations from a broad base of paid non-expert contributors over the Web, and proposes a technique for bias correction that significantly improves annotation quality on two tasks.
Proceedings Article

Learning Syntactic Patterns for Automatic Hypernym Discovery

TL;DR: This paper presents a new algorithm for automatically learning hypernym (is-a) relations from text, using "dependency path" features extracted from parse trees and introduces a general-purpose formalization and generalization of these patterns.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Semantic Taxonomy Induction from Heterogenous Evidence

TL;DR: This work proposes a novel algorithm for inducing semantic taxonomies that flexibly incorporates evidence from multiple classifiers over heterogenous relationships to optimize the entire structure of the taxonomy, using knowledge of a word's coordinate terms to help in determining its hypernyms, and vice versa.
Patent

Methods and systems of automatic ontology population

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present methods and systems for creating a knowledge graph that relates terms in a corpus of literature in the form of an assertion and provides a probability of the veracity of the assertion.