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
Supertagging: Using Complex Lexical Descriptions in Natural Language Processing
β Scribed by Srinivas Bangalore, Aravind K. Joshi (eds.)
- Publisher
- The MIT Press
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 514
- Series
- A Bradford Book
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Investigations into employing statistical approaches with linguistically motivated representations and its impact on Natural Language processing tasks.
The last decade has seen computational implementations of large hand-crafted natural language grammars in formal frameworks such as Tree-Adjoining Grammar (TAG), Combinatory Categorical Grammar (CCG), Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar (HPSG), and Lexical Functional Grammar (LFG). Grammars in these frameworks typically associate linguistically motivated rich descriptions (Supertags) with words. With the availability of parse-annotated corpora, grammars in the TAG and CCG frameworks have also been automatically extracted while maintaining the linguistic relevance of the extracted Supertags. In these frameworks, Supertags are designed so that complex linguistic constraints are localized to operate within the domain of those descriptions. While this localization increases local ambiguity, the process of disambiguation (Supertagging) provides a unique way of combining linguistic and statistical information. This volume investigates the theme of employing statistical approaches with linguistically motivated representations and its impact on Natural Language Processing tasks. In particular, the contributors describe research in which words are associated with Supertags that are the primitives of different grammar formalisms including Lexicalized Tree-Adjoining Grammar (LTAG).
Contributors
Jens BΓ€cker, Srinivas Bangalore, Akshar Bharati, Pierre Boullier, Tomas By, John Chen, Stephen Clark, Berthold Crysmann, James R. Curran, Kilian Foth, Robert Frank, Karin Harbusch, SaΕ‘a Hasan, Aravind Joshi, Vincenzo Lombardo, Takuya Matsuzaki, Alessandro Mazzei, Wolfgang Menzel, Yusuke Miyao, Richard Moot, Alexis Nasr, GΓΌnter Neumann, Martha Palmer, Owen Rambow, Rajeev Sangal, Anoop Sarkar, Giorgio Satta, Libin Shen, Patrick Sturt, Jun'ichi Tsujii, K. Vijay-Shanker, Wen Wang, Fei Xia
β¦ Table of Contents
Cover
Title Page
Contents
Preface
List of Figures
Contributors
1 Introduction
Part I: Creating and Organizing Supertags
2 From Treebanks to Tree-Adjoining Grammars
3 Developing Tree-Adjoining Grammars with Lexical Descriptions
Part II: Supertagging and Parsing
4 Complexity of Parsing for Some Lexicalized Formalisms
5 Combining Supertagging and Lexicalized Tree-Adjoining Grammar Parsing
6 Discriminative Learning of Supertagging
7 A Nonstatistical Parsing-Based Approach to Supertagging
8 Nonlexical Chart Parsing for TAG
Part III: Supertags in Related Formalisms
9 Supertagging for Efficient Wide-Coverage CCG Parsing
10 Constraint Dependency Grammars: SuperARVs, Language Modeling, and Parsing
11 Guiding a Constraint Dependency Parser with Supertags
12 Extraction of Type-Logical Supertags from the Spoken Dutch Corpus
13 Extracting Supertags from HPSG-Based Treebanks
14 Probabilistic Context-Free Grammars with Latent Annotations
15 Computational Paninian Grammar Framework
Part IV: Linguistic and Psycholinguistic Issues
16 Lexicalized Syntax and Phonological Merge
17 Constraining the Form of Supertags with the Strong Connectivity Hypothesis
Part V: Applications of Supertagging
18 Semantic Labeling and Parsing via Tree-Adjoining Grammars
19 Applications of HMM-Based Supertagging
Author Index
Subject Index
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