John McCrae (1872-1918) was a Canadian physician, poet, and soldier who fought and died in the First World War. He penned perhaps his most memorable and lasting poem, "In Flanders Fields," shortly after the death of a comrade at the Second Battle of Ypres in 1915. The poem gained almost instant popularity, being used for recruiting efforts and victory bond sales throughout the remainder of the war, and solidified forever the symbol of the poppy as a memorial token for the service members who had perished. His death towards the end of the war, like that of so many others in the perilous years between 1914 and 1918, cut short the trajectory of what had already amounted to a brilliant career. As a close friend of such titans of medicine as William Osler and Harvey Cushing, as well as acquainted with the likes of Rudyard Kipling, it is not difficult to imagine the impact that his passing had upon the future of medicine and literature.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10655761 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.14797/mdcvj.1283 | DOI Listing |
Lang Resour Eval
February 2022
Insight SFI Research Centre for Data Analytics, Data Science Institute, National University of Ireland Galway, Galway, Ireland.
This paper describes the development of a multilingual, manually annotated dataset for three under-resourced Dravidian languages generated from social media comments. The dataset was annotated for sentiment analysis and offensive language identification for a total of more than 60,000 YouTube comments. The dataset consists of around 44,000 comments in Tamil-English, around 7000 comments in Kannada-English, and around 20,000 comments in Malayalam-English.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Artif Intell
February 2022
Data Science Institute, National University of Ireland Galway, Galway, Ireland.
Word senses are the fundamental unit of description in lexicography, yet it is rarely the case that different dictionaries reach any agreement on the number and definition of senses in a language. With the recent rise in natural language processing and other computational approaches there is an increasing demand for quantitatively validated sense catalogues of words, yet no consensus methodology exists. In this paper, we look at four main approaches to making sense distinctions: formal, cognitive, distributional, and intercultural and examine the strengths and weaknesses of each approach.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSN Comput Sci
June 2021
Unit for Linguistic Data, Insight SFI Research Centre for Data Analytics, Data Science Institute, National University of Ireland Galway, Galway, Ireland.
Machine translation is one of the applications of natural language processing which has been explored in different languages. Recently researchers started paying attention towards machine translation for resource-poor languages and closely related languages. A widespread and underlying problem for these machine translation systems is the linguistic difference and variation in orthographic conventions which causes many issues to traditional approaches.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ
January 2018
Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust, Salford, UK.
Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf
March 2017
Global Respiratory Franchise, GlaxoSmithKline UK Ltd, Uxbridge, UK.
Background: The Salford Lung Study (SLS) programme, encompassing two phase III pragmatic randomised controlled trials, was designed to generate evidence on the effectiveness of a once-daily treatment for asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in routine primary care using electronic health records.
Objective: The objective of this study was to describe and discuss the safety monitoring methodology and the challenges associated with ensuring patient safety in the SLS. Refinements to safety monitoring processes and infrastructure are also discussed.
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!