Harald Trost

525 total citations
40 papers, 259 citations indexed

About

Harald Trost is a scholar working on Artificial Intelligence, Experimental and Cognitive Psychology and Information Systems. According to data from OpenAlex, Harald Trost has authored 40 papers receiving a total of 259 indexed citations (citations by other indexed papers that have themselves been cited), including 37 papers in Artificial Intelligence, 5 papers in Experimental and Cognitive Psychology and 4 papers in Information Systems. Recurrent topics in Harald Trost's work include Natural Language Processing Techniques (29 papers), Speech and dialogue systems (16 papers) and Topic Modeling (13 papers). Harald Trost is often cited by papers focused on Natural Language Processing Techniques (29 papers), Speech and dialogue systems (16 papers) and Topic Modeling (13 papers). Harald Trost collaborates with scholars based in Austria, Germany and Italy. Harald Trost's co-authors include Marco Baroni, Jeremy Jancsary, Hannes Pirker, Michael Kühn, Alexandra Klein, Karin Harbusch, Barry Haddow, Robert Trappl, Adolfo Hernández and Gernot Kubin and has published in prestigious journals such as Interacting with Computers, Computer Speech & Language and Applied Artificial Intelligence.

In The Last Decade

Harald Trost

37 papers receiving 209 citations

Peers

Harald Trost
Judith Markowitz United States
Sandra Williams United Kingdom
Irene Langkilde United States
Mary S. Neff United States
Rani Nelken United States
Martin Reynaert Netherlands
Judith Markowitz United States
Harald Trost
Citations per year, relative to Harald Trost Harald Trost (= 1×) peers Judith Markowitz

Countries citing papers authored by Harald Trost

Since Specialization
Citations

This map shows the geographic impact of Harald Trost's research. It shows the number of citations coming from papers published by authors working in each country. You can also color the map by specialization and compare the number of citations received by Harald Trost with the expected number of citations based on a country's size and research output (numbers larger than one mean the country cites Harald Trost more than expected).

Fields of papers citing papers by Harald Trost

Since Specialization
Physical SciencesHealth SciencesLife SciencesSocial Sciences

This network shows the impact of papers produced by Harald Trost. Nodes represent research fields, and links connect fields that are likely to share authors. Colored nodes show fields that tend to cite the papers produced by Harald Trost. The network helps show where Harald Trost may publish in the future.

Co-authorship network of co-authors of Harald Trost

This figure shows the co-authorship network connecting the top 25 collaborators of Harald Trost. A scholar is included among the top collaborators of Harald Trost based on the total number of citations received by their joint publications. Widths of edges represent the number of papers authors have co-authored together. Node borders signify the number of papers an author published with Harald Trost. Harald Trost is excluded from the visualization to improve readability, since they are connected to all nodes in the network.

All Works

20 of 20 papers shown
1.
Haddow, Barry, et al.. (2013). Corpus development for machine translation between standard and dialectal varieties. 7–14. 2 indexed citations
2.
Jancsary, Jeremy, et al.. (2011). Proceedings of the First Workshop on Algorithms and Resources for Modelling of Dialects and Language Varieties. 8 indexed citations
3.
Klein, Alexandra, et al.. (2010). Using Domain Knowledge about Medications to Correct Recognition Errors in Medical Report Creation. North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics. 22–28. 1 indexed citations
4.
Jancsary, Jeremy, et al.. (2010). Semantic and phonetic automatic reconstruction of medical dictations. Computer Speech & Language. 25(2). 363–385. 2 indexed citations
5.
Jancsary, Jeremy, et al.. (2010). Towards context-aware personalization and a broad perspective on the semantics of news articles. 289–292. 12 indexed citations
6.
Trost, Harald, et al.. (2005). THE LANGUAGE COMPONENT OF THE FASTY TEXT PREDICTION SYSTEM. Applied Artificial Intelligence. 19(8). 743–781. 12 indexed citations
7.
Baroni, Marco, et al.. (2002). Predicting the components of German nominal compounds. Institutional Research Information System (Università degli Studi di Trento). 470–474. 23 indexed citations
8.
Alter, Kai, et al.. (2000). The Vienna Prosodic Speech Corpus: Purpose, Content and Encoding. 191–195. 1 indexed citations
9.
Pirker, Hannes, et al.. (1999). Thus spoke the user to the wizard. Conference of the International Speech Communication Association. 1171–1174. 5 indexed citations
10.
Trost, Harald, et al.. (1996). An HPSG-based generator for German. 2. 752–752. 2 indexed citations
11.
Trost, Harald. (1993). Coping with derivation in a morphological component. 368–368. 6 indexed citations
12.
Trost, Harald. (1993). Feature formalisms and linguistic ambiguity. Medical Entomology and Zoology. 1 indexed citations
13.
Trost, Harald. (1990). The applicaton of two-level morphology to non-concatenative German morphology. 2. 371–376. 20 indexed citations
14.
Trost, Harald, et al.. (1990). Datenbank-DIALOG: how to communicate with your database in German (and enjoy it). Interacting with Computers. 2(3). 367–381. 1 indexed citations
15.
Trost, Harald, et al.. (1988). On the interaction of syntax and semantics in a syntactically guided caseframe parser. 2. 677–682. 1 indexed citations
16.
Trost, Harald, et al.. (1986). Towards the automatic acquisition of lexical data. 387–387. 4 indexed citations
17.
Trost, Harald, et al.. (1983). VIE-LANG: A GERMAN LANGUAGE DIALOGUE SYSTEM. Cybernetics & Systems. 14(2-4). 343–357. 3 indexed citations
18.
Trost, Harald, et al.. (1982). Reference resolution and semantic coherence. 2. 171–175. 1 indexed citations
19.
Trost, Harald, et al.. (1981). The role of roles: some aspects of real world knowledge representation. International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence. 237–239. 6 indexed citations
20.
Trost, Harald, et al.. (1980). Lexical analysis of German texts. 13(3). 6–12. 1 indexed citations

Rankless uses publication and citation data sourced from OpenAlex, an open and comprehensive bibliographic database. While OpenAlex provides broad and valuable coverage of the global research landscape, it—like all bibliographic datasets—has inherent limitations. These include incomplete records, variations in author disambiguation, differences in journal indexing, and delays in data updates. As a result, some metrics and network relationships displayed in Rankless may not fully capture the entirety of a scholar's output or impact.

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