<p>Research in artificial intelligence, natural language processing and knowledge-based systems has blossomed during the past decade. At national and international symposia as well as in research centers and universities all over the world, these subjects have been the focus of intense debate and st
Predicative Forms in Natural Language and in Lexical Knowledge Bases
β Scribed by Patrick Saint-Dizier (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer Netherlands
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 380
- Series
- Text, Speech and Language Technology 6
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This volume is a selection of papers presented at a workshop entitled Predicative Forms in Natural Language and in Lexical Knowledge Bases organized in Toulouse in August 1996. A predicate is a named relation that exists among one or more arguments. In natural language, predicates are realized as verbs, prepositions, nouns and adjectives, to cite the most frequent ones. Research on the identification, organization, and semantic representaΒ tion of predicates in artificial intelligence and in language processing is a very active research field. The emergence of new paradigms in theoretical language processing, the definition of new problems and the important evolΒ ution of applications have, in fact, stimulated much interest and debate on the role and nature of predicates in naturallangage. From a broad theoretΒ ical perspective, the notion of predicate is central to research on the syntaxΒ semantics interface, the generative lexicon, the definition of ontology-based semantic representations, and the formation of verb semantic classes. From a computational perspective, the notion of predicate plays a centΒ ral role in a number of applications including the design of lexical knowledge bases, the development of automatic indexing systems for the extraction of structured semantic representations, and the creation of interlingual forms in machine translation.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-viii
An Introduction to the Lexical Semantics of Predicative Forms....Pages 1-52
A Comparison of Different Lexical Semantics Approaches for Transfer Verbs with a Particular Emphasis on Buy/Sell....Pages 53-91
The Organization of Verbs and Verb Concepts in a Semantic Net....Pages 93-109
Describing Verb Semantics in a Type Hierarchy....Pages 111-137
Alternations and Verb Semantic Classes for French: Analysis and Class Formation....Pages 139-170
Semantics in Action....Pages 171-203
Corpus-Based Argument Identification Using a Statistically Enriched Valency MRD....Pages 205-228
Capturing Motion Verb Generalizations in Synchronous Tree Adjoining Grammars....Pages 229-256
Some Syntactic Consequences of Argument Structure Dimensions....Pages 257-284
Pragmatic Connectives as Predicates. The Case of Inferential Connectives....Pages 285-319
Interlingual Representation of Complex Predicates in a Multilingual Approach: The Problem of Lexical Selection....Pages 321-347
The Semantics of Event-Based Nominals....Pages 349-374
Back Matter....Pages 375-379
β¦ Subjects
Computational Linguistics; Electrical Engineering; Semantics; Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics)
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Lexical Functions in Lexicography and Natural Language Processing is entirely devoted to the topic of Lexical Functions, which have been introduced in the framework of the Meaning-Text Theory (MTT) as a means for describing restricted lexical co-occurrence and derivational relations. It provides det
This book contains a selection of the papers given at an international conference at the University of Konstanz (Germany) in 1991. All contributions relate to the assumption that lexical knowledge plays a central role in the organization of language, inasmuch as the components or modules of grammar
<p>The internal bootstrapps for establishing the grammatical system of a human language build an essential topic in language acquisition research. The discussion of the last 20 years came up with the Lexical Bootstrapping Hypothesis which assigns lexical development the role of the central bootstrap
Computational Lexical Semantics is one of the first volumes to provide models for the creation of various kinds of computerized lexicons for the automatic treatment of natural language, with applications to, among other things, machine translation, automatic indexing, database front-ends, and knowle
Computational Lexical Semantics is one of the first volumes to provide models for the creation of various kinds of computerized lexicons for the automatic treatment of natural language, with applications to, among other things, machine translation, automatic indexing, database front-ends, and knowle