This book's main goal is to show readers how to use the linguistic theory of Noam Chomsky, called Universal Grammar, to represent English, French, and German on a computer using the Prolog computer language. In so doing, it presents a follow-the-dots approach to natural language processing, linguist
Natural language computing: an English generative grammar in Prolog
โ Scribed by Dougherty R.C.
- Publisher
- Lawrence Erlbaum Associates
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 396
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The topic of this book is the theoretical foundations of the theory LSLT - Lexical Semantic Language Theory - and its implementation in the system for text analysis and understanding called GETARUN, developed at the University of Venice, Laboratory of Computational Linguistics, Department of Language Sciences. LSLT encompasses a psycholinguistic theory of the way the language faculty works, a grammatical theory of the way in which sentences are analysed and generated - for this we will be using Lexical-Functional Grammar - a semantic theory of the way in which meaning is encoded and expressed in utterances - for this we will be using Situation Semantics, and a parsing theory of the way in which components of the theory interact in a common architecture to produce the needed language representation to be eventually spoken aloud or interpreted by the phonetic/acoustic language interface. LSLT will then be put to use to show how discourse relations are mapped automatically from text using the tools available in the 4 sub-theories, and in particular we will focus on Causal Relations showing how the various sub-theories contribute to address different types of causality
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The topic of this book is the theoretical foundations of the theory LSLT - Lexical Semantic Language Theory - and its implementation in the system for text analysis and understanding called GETARUN, developed at the University of Venice, Laboratory of Computational Linguistics, Department of Languag
This book deals with the computational application of systemic functional grammar (SFG) for natural language generation. More particularly, it first describes the implementation of a fragment of the grammar of German in the computational framework of KOMET-PENMAN for multilingual generation. Second,