General Architecture for Text Engineering
General Architecture for Text Engineering or GATE is a Java suite of tools originally developed at the University of Sheffield beginning in 1995 and now used worldwide by a wide community of scientists, companies, teachers and students for many natural language processing tasks, including information extraction in many languages.
GATE Developer v5 main window | |
Developer(s) | GATE research team, Dept. Computer Science, University of Sheffield |
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Initial release | 1995 |
Stable release | 8.6.1 (January 17, 2020 ) [±] |
Preview release | 9.0-SNAPSHOT (February 11, 2024 (Nightly builds released every day)) [±] |
Repository | |
Written in | Java |
Operating system | Cross-platform |
Available in | English |
Type | Text mining Information Extraction |
License | LGPL |
Website | gate |
As of May 28, 2011, 881 people are on the gate-users mailing list at SourceForge.net, and 111,932 downloads from SourceForge are recorded since the project moved to SourceForge in 2005. The paper "GATE: A framework and graphical development environment for robust NLP tools and applications" has received over 2000 citations since publication (according to Google Scholar). Books covering the use of GATE, in addition to the GATE User Guide, include "Building Search Applications: Lucene, LingPipe, and Gate", by Manu Konchady, and "Introduction to Linguistic Annotation and Text Analytics", by Graham Wilcock.
GATE community and research has been involved in several European research projects including: Transitioning Applications to Ontologies, SEKT, NeOn, Media-Campaign, Musing, Service-Finder, LIRICS and KnowledgeWeb.