I forgot to mention MetaMap [1] which uses UIMA [2] to map biomedical text
to a specialized thesaurus and/or discover relevant concepts.
Tommaso

[1] : http://metamap.nlm.nih.gov/
[2] : http://metamap.nlm.nih.gov/README_uima.html

2011/3/9 Tommaso Teofili <[email protected]>

> Hello,
> the first things that come to my mind are the OHNLP Consortium (there are
> many different projects and tools) [1][2], U-Compare [3] and the BIO NLP
> Component repository [4] (this latter providing tools more than
> applications).
> Regards,
> Tommaso
>
> [1] : https://cabig-kc.nci.nih.gov/Vocab/KC/index.php/OHNLP
> [2] : http://sourceforge.net/projects/ohnlp/
> [3] : http://research.maveric.org/mig/uima.html
> [4] : http://bionlp-uima.sourceforge.net/
>
> p.s.:
> nice to see someone else on UIMA lists based in Italy like me :-)
>
> 2011/3/9 G.M. Weiss <[email protected]>
>
> To whom is concerned,
>> I have been suggested to contact you from IBM Italia since UIMA has become
>> open source product.
>> I would be interested to know if you can tell me any application of UIMA
>> as
>> automatic tool to help searching and scanning scientific literature with
>> application to biological sciences and chemistry. It is my understanding
>> that some similar applications already exist with reference to
>> pharmaceutical sciences.
>> Thank you for indicating any contact (possibly even in Italy) or specific
>> link.
>>
>> Sincerely,
>>
>> Dr G.M. Weiss
>>
>> [email protected]
>>
>
>

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