Thomas Kober

Affiliations:
  • Zalando SE, Berlin, Germany
  • Rasa, Berlin, Germany (former)
  • University of Edinburgh, UK (former)
  • University of Sussex, UK (PhD 2018)


According to our database1, Thomas Kober authored at least 16 papers between 2015 and 2024.

Collaborative distances:
  • Dijkstra number2 of five.
  • Erdős number3 of five.

Timeline

Legend:

Book 
In proceedings 
Article 
PhD thesis 
Dataset
Other 

Links

Online presence:

On csauthors.net:

Bibliography

2024
Retrieve, Annotate, Evaluate, Repeat: Leveraging Multimodal LLMs for Large-Scale Product Retrieval Evaluation.
CoRR, 2024

What should I wear to a party in a Greek taverna? Evaluation for Conversational Agents in the Fashion Domain.
CoRR, 2024

2022
Zero-shot Cross-Linguistic Learning of Event Semantics.
CoRR, 2022

2021
Data Augmentation for Hypernymy Detection.
Proceedings of the 16th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Main Volume, 2021

2020
STAR: A Schema-Guided Dialog Dataset for Transfer Learning.
CoRR, 2020

Going Beyond T-SNE: Exposing <tt>whatlies</tt> in Text Embeddings.
CoRR, 2020

Aspectuality Across Genre: A Distributional Semantics Approach.
Proceedings of the 28th International Conference on Computational Linguistics, 2020

2019
Temporal and Aspectual Entailment.
Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Computational Semantics, 2019

2018
Inferring unobserved co-occurrence events in Anchored Packed Trees.
PhD thesis, 2018

2017
One Representation per Word - Does it make Sense for Composition?
CoRR, 2017

When a Red Herring in Not a Red Herring: Using Compositional Methods to Detect Non-Compositional Phrases.
Proceedings of the 15th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics, 2017

Improving Semantic Composition with Offset Inference.
Proceedings of the 55th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics, 2017

2016
Aligning Packed Dependency Trees: A Theory of Composition for Distributional Semantics.
Comput. Linguistics, 2016

A critique of word similarity as a method for evaluating distributional semantic models.
Proceedings of the 1st Workshop on Evaluating Vector-Space Representations for NLP, 2016

Improving Sparse Word Representations with Distributional Inference for Semantic Composition.
Proceedings of the 2016 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing, 2016

2015
Optimising Agile Social Media Analysis.
Proceedings of the 6th Workshop on Computational Approaches to Subjectivity, 2015


  Loading...