conftrace_

Geraldine Damnati

15 papers · 2008–2026 · 7 conferences · across top CS/AI conferences

Achievements

Jump to papers ↓
+8 more ↓ 🌈 Renaissance Researcher (5) 🌉 Interdisciplinary Bridge 🏃 Academic Marathon (17) 🌍 Conference Polyglot (7) 🗺️ Taxonomy Completionist (31)
🐣 Hot Topic Early Bird 🌍 Conference Polyglot (7) 🏃 Academic Marathon (17) Prolific Year (5) 🚀 Conference Pioneer 💎 Century Club (14) 🗃️ Keyword Collector (77) The Questioner

Conferences

EMNLP (3) INTERSPEECH (3) ACL (2) COLING (2) EACL (2) SEMEVAL (2) NAACL (1)

Papers

DivMerge: A divergence-based model merging method for multi-tasking EACL 2026 Statistical Deficiency for Task Inclusion Estimation ACL 2025 A linguistically-motivated evaluation methodology for unraveling model’s abilities in reading comprehension tasks EMNLP 2024 Extrinsic evaluation of question generation methods with user journey logs COLING 2024 Exploring Social Sciences Archives with Explainable Document Linkage through Question Generation EACL 2023 SpanAlign: Efficient Sequence Tagging Annotation Projection into Translated Data applied to Cross-Lingual Opinion Mining EMNLP 2021 Robust Semantic Parsing with Adversarial Learning for Domain Generalization NAACL 2019 MaskParse@Deskin at SemEval-2019 Task 1: Cross-lingual UCCA Semantic Parsing using Recursive Masked Sequence Tagging SEMEVAL 2019 Adapting a FrameNet Semantic Parser for Spoken Language Understanding Using Adversarial Learning INTERSPEECH 2019 The Impact of Word Representations on Sequential Neural MWE Identification ACL 2019 CALOR-QUEST : generating a training corpus for Machine Reading Comprehension models from shallow semantic annotations EMNLP 2019 Evaluating Automatic Topic Segmentation as a Segment Retrieval Task INTERSPEECH 2017 SimBow at SemEval-2017 Task 3: Soft-Cosine Semantic Similarity between Questions for Community Question Answering SEMEVAL 2017 Exploring Collections of Multimedia Archives Through Innovative Interfaces in the Context of Digital Humanities INTERSPEECH 2016 Normalizing SMS: are Two Metaphors Better than One ? COLING 2008