Abstract: Highlights • We analyse the named entity recognition and disambiguation performance on tweets. • Multiple state-of-the-art systems are included. • Commercial and academic systems suffer the same range of problems. • Lack of context is a major problem, demanding new, custom NER & NEL approaches. • A named entity linking corpus is released with the paper. Abstract Applying natural language processing for mining and intelligent information access to tweets (a form of microblog) is a challenging, emerging research area. Unlike carefully authored news text and other longer content, tweets pose a number of new challenges, due to their short, noisy, context-dependent, and dynamic nature. Information extraction from tweets is typically performed in a pipeline, comprising consecutive stages of language identification, tokenisation, part-of-speech tagging, named entity recognition and entity disambiguation (e.g. with respect to DBpedia). In this work, we describe a new Twitter entity disambiguation dataset, and conduct an empirical analysis of named entity recognition and disambiguation, investigating how robust a number of state-of-the-art systems are on such noisy texts, what the main sources of error are, and which problems should be further investigated to improve the state of the art.
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