@inproceedings{Hirst_2008_textMeaning,
  author = "Graeme Hirst",
  title = "The future of text-meaning in computational linguistics",
  year = "2008",
  editor = "Sojka, Petr; Hor&aacute;k, Ale&#353;; Kope&#269;ek, Ivan; and Pala, Karel",
  booktitle = "Proceedings, 11th International Conference on Text, Speech and Dialogue (TSD 2008) (Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence 5246, Springer-Verlag)",
  month = "September",
  address = "Brno, Czech Republic",
  pages = "1--9",
  abstract = "Writer-based and reader-based views of text-meaning are reflected by the respective questions ``What is the author trying to tell me'' and ``What does this text mean to me personally?'' Contemporary computational linguistics, however, generally takes neither view. But this is not adequate for the development of sophisticated applications such as intelligence gathering and question answering.  I discuss different views of text-meaning from the perspective of the needs of computational text analysis and the collaborative repair of misunderstanding.",
  download = "http://ftp.cs.toronto.edu/pub/gh/Hirst-TSD-2008.pdf"
}


