Book Image

Natural Language Processing with Java - Second Edition

By : Richard M. Reese
Book Image

Natural Language Processing with Java - Second Edition

By: Richard M. Reese

Overview of this book

Natural Language Processing (NLP) allows you to take any sentence and identify patterns, special names, company names, and more. The second edition of Natural Language Processing with Java teaches you how to perform language analysis with the help of Java libraries, while constantly gaining insights from the outcomes. You’ll start by understanding how NLP and its various concepts work. Having got to grips with the basics, you’ll explore important tools and libraries in Java for NLP, such as CoreNLP, OpenNLP, Neuroph, and Mallet. You’ll then start performing NLP on different inputs and tasks, such as tokenization, model training, parts-of-speech and parsing trees. You’ll learn about statistical machine translation, summarization, dialog systems, complex searches, supervised and unsupervised NLP, and more. By the end of this book, you’ll have learned more about NLP, neural networks, and various other trained models in Java for enhancing the performance of NLP applications.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Title Page
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Chapter 2. Finding Parts of Text

Finding parts of text is concerned with breaking text down into individual units, called tokens, and optionally performing additional processing on those tokens. This additional processing can include stemming, lemmatization, stopword removal, synonym expansion, and converting text to lowercase.

We will demonstrate several tokenization techniques found in the standard Java distribution. These are included because sometimes this is all you may need to do the job. There may be no need to import NLP libraries in this situation. However, these techniques are limited. This is followed by a discussion of specific tokenizers or tokenization approaches supported by NLP APIs. These examples will provide a reference for how the tokenizers are used and the type of output they produce. This is followed by a simple comparison of the differences between the approaches.

There are many specialized tokenizers. For example, the Apache Lucene project supports tokenizers for various...