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Natural Language Processing - MMAX Download

Welcome to the MMAX Annotation Tool Homepage.


New: MMAX2 is now an open-source project at mmax2.sourceforge.net!


This web site (http://mmax.eml-research.de) covers primarily the new MMAX2 annotation tool. Information regarding its predecessor MMAX (including a list of projects using MMAX) can be found here.

Please direct all questions, comments and suggestions regarding this web site and the featured annotation tool(s) to [email protected].

Download MMAX2: Click here to download an evaluation version of the latest release version of MMAX2 (1.0 beta 4 b). (Released February 9, 2005, updated March 16, 2006). This version contains an anonymous evaluation key valid until end of Mai 2006. Additional keys are available upon request (simply send mail to [email protected]).
Note: The evaluation version does not reflect the current state of development for MMAX2! A new version (beta 5) will be made available soon.

Different forms of licenses (for academic teaching, academic research and commerical use) are available. Contact us at [email protected] for details.

Do you want to know why MMAX2 is not free? Click here!

Some of MMAX2's features:

MMAX2 features separation of base data and annotations (i.e. markables) on the file level by means of stand-off annotation.

In contrast to its predecessor, MMAX2 now supports arbitrarily many levels of annotation, each of which resides in a separate file.

Arbitrarily many relations between markables (both intra- and inter-level) can now be defined, annotated and browsed. The following screen shot shows how a set relation can be used to model and visualize coreference.



Similarly, a pointer relation can be used to link a bridging expression to its bridging antecedent.



MMAX2 now also supports attribute-dependent rendering of markables. In the above screen shots, e.g., coref-level markables that are actually part of a coreference set are rendered in italics, while singleton coref-level markables are rendered in plain text.
The screen shot below (taken from the SPAAC project) demonstrates a different type of visualization:

Click here for full-size image (in new window)

Each utterance is 'tagged' in the display with its associated speech act tag (left) and its syntactic type (right). In addition, utterances with a negative polarity appear in red, those with a positive polarity in green.

MMAX2 comes with a Markable Browser add-on which allows for easy browsing through markable levels in either alphabetic or document order. The markable browser also has a KWIC-Index view for easily inspecting markables in their context.



The MMAX2 Project Wizard allows you to create a MMAX2 project from raw text. Apart from tokenization and XML-conversion, the wizard can also create markables based on structural information in the input file. See the updated MMAX2 Quick Start Guide (also included in the tool download) for details.






MMAX: Multi-Modal Annotation in XML

Download MMAX1

Note: This section is about an old version of MMAX. This version is stable and will remain to be available for free download. However, the tool will not be developed any further. The only version that is being actively developed is now MMAX2.


Click here to download the complete MMAX package (latest version 0.94 build 77) (tar-gzipped) (incl. Apache Xalan and Xerces).
This is required for the first installation of MMAX1.

Click here to download the latest version (0.94 build 77) only.

Note: From version 0.865 on, MMAX will contain beta-versions of the MMAX Discourse API.

Last Update: April 14th, 2003 (0.94 build 77)

Note: Please reference this web site (http://mmax.eml-research.de) if you use the MMAX tool in your projects.
You might also want to include a reference to a MMAX-related paper from our publications
section.

The following is a (still incomplete) list of non-EML projects using or evaluating MMAX (last modification: August 13, 2004)

Research Projects

MULI: Multilinguale Informationsstruktur
   Baumann, Stephan et al. (2004): Multi-dimensional annotation of linguistic corpora for investigating information structure.
   Kruijff-Korbayová, Ivana and Kruijff, Geert-Jan (2004): Discourse-Level Annotation for Investigating Information Structure.

VENEX (no web site yet)
   Poesio, Massimo et al. (2004): The VENEX corpus of anaphora and deixis in spoken and written Italian

DIALOG: Tutorial Dialogue with a Mathematics Assistance System
   Wolska, Magdalena et al. (2004): An annotated corpus of tutorial dialogs on mathematical theorem proving

GNOME
   Poesio, Massimo (2004): The MATE/GNOME Scheme for Anaphoric Annotation, Revisited

The Potsdam Commentary Corpus
Stede, Manfred (2004): The Potsdam Commentary Corpus
   Dipper, Stefanie and Götze, Michael and Stede, Manfred (2004): Simple Annotation Tools for Complex Annotation Tasks: an Evaluation

ICT 'Mission Rehearsal Excercise Project'
   Garg, Saurabh et al. (2004): Evaluation of Transcription and Annotation tools for a Multi-modal, Multi-party dialogue corpus

ANANAS: Annotation Anaphorique pour l' Analyse Sémantique de Corpus
   Gardent, Claire and Manuélian, Hélène and Kow, Eric (2003): Which bridges for bridging definite descriptions?

COMMOn-REFs (no current web site)
   Vieira, Renata et al. (2003): From concrete to virtual annotation mark-up language: The case of COMMON-REFs

IM2.MDM (no current web site)
   Popescu-Belis, Andrei et al. (2004): Building and Using a Corpus of Shallow Dialog Annotated Meetings


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