4,312 research outputs found
Learning morphological phenomena of Modern Greek an exploratory approach
This paper presents a computational model for the description of concatenative morphological phenomena of modern Greek (such as inflection, derivation and compounding) to allow learners, trainers and developers to explore linguistic processes through their own constructions in an interactive openâended multimedia environment. The proposed model introduces a new language metaphor, the âpuzzleâmetaphorâ (similar to the existing âturtleâmetaphorâ for concepts from mathematics and physics), based on a visualized unificationâlike mechanism for pattern matching. The computational implementation of the model can be used for creating environments for learning through design and learning by teaching
Interaction Grammars
Interaction Grammar (IG) is a grammatical formalism based on the notion of
polarity. Polarities express the resource sensitivity of natural languages by
modelling the distinction between saturated and unsaturated syntactic
structures. Syntactic composition is represented as a chemical reaction guided
by the saturation of polarities. It is expressed in a model-theoretic framework
where grammars are constraint systems using the notion of tree description and
parsing appears as a process of building tree description models satisfying
criteria of saturation and minimality
Neurocognitive Informatics Manifesto.
Informatics studies all aspects of the structure of natural and artificial information systems. Theoretical and abstract approaches to information have made great advances, but human information processing is still unmatched in many areas, including information management, representation and understanding. Neurocognitive informatics is a new, emerging field that should help to improve the matching of artificial and natural systems, and inspire better computational algorithms to solve problems that are still beyond the reach of machines. In this position paper examples of neurocognitive inspirations and promising directions in this area are given
Clausal tripartition, anti-locality and preliminary considerations of a formal approach to clause types
We will see how it is reasonable to speak of a minimum distance that an element must cross in order to enter into a well-formed movement dependency. In the course of the discussion of this notion of anti-localiry, a theoretical framework unfolds which is compatible with recent thoughts on syntactic computation regarding local economy and phrase structure, as well as the view that certain pronouns are grammatical formatives, rather than fully lexical expressions. The upshot will be that if an element does not move a certain distance, the derivation crashes at PF, unless the lower copy is spelled out as a pronominal element. The framework presented has a number of implications for the study of clause-typing, of which some will be discussed towards the end
A Formal Framework for Linguistic Annotation
`Linguistic annotation' covers any descriptive or analytic notations applied
to raw language data. The basic data may be in the form of time functions --
audio, video and/or physiological recordings -- or it may be textual. The added
notations may include transcriptions of all sorts (from phonetic features to
discourse structures), part-of-speech and sense tagging, syntactic analysis,
`named entity' identification, co-reference annotation, and so on. While there
are several ongoing efforts to provide formats and tools for such annotations
and to publish annotated linguistic databases, the lack of widely accepted
standards is becoming a critical problem. Proposed standards, to the extent
they exist, have focussed on file formats. This paper focuses instead on the
logical structure of linguistic annotations. We survey a wide variety of
existing annotation formats and demonstrate a common conceptual core, the
annotation graph. This provides a formal framework for constructing,
maintaining and searching linguistic annotations, while remaining consistent
with many alternative data structures and file formats.Comment: 49 page
Paracompositionality, MWEs and Argument Substitution
Multi-word expressions, verb-particle constructions, idiomatically combining
phrases, and phrasal idioms have something in common: not all of their elements
contribute to the argument structure of the predicate implicated by the
expression.
Radically lexicalized theories of grammar that avoid string-, term-, logical
form-, and tree-writing, and categorial grammars that avoid wrap operation,
make predictions about the categories involved in verb-particles and phrasal
idioms. They may require singleton types, which can only substitute for one
value, not just for one kind of value. These types are asymmetric: they can be
arguments only. They also narrowly constrain the kind of semantic value that
can correspond to such syntactic categories. Idiomatically combining phrases do
not subcategorize for singleton types, and they exploit another locally
computable and compositional property of a correspondence, that every syntactic
expression can project its head word. Such MWEs can be seen as empirically
realized categorial possibilities, rather than lacuna in a theory of
lexicalizable syntactic categories.Comment: accepted version (pre-final) for 23rd Formal Grammar Conference,
August 2018, Sofi
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