23,461 research outputs found
Memoization in Constraint Logic Programming
This paper shows how to apply memoization (caching of subgoals and associated
answer substitutions) in a constraint logic programming setting. The research
is is motivated by the desire to apply constraint logic programming (CLP) to
problems in natural language processing that involve (constraint) interleaving
or coroutining, such as GB and HPSG parsing.Comment: 11 page
Type-driven semantic interpretation and feature dependencies in R-LFG
Once one has enriched LFG's formal machinery with the linear logic mechanisms
needed for semantic interpretation as proposed by Dalrymple et. al., it is
natural to ask whether these make any existing components of LFG redundant. As
Dalrymple and her colleagues note, LFG's f-structure completeness and coherence
constraints fall out as a by-product of the linear logic machinery they propose
for semantic interpretation, thus making those f-structure mechanisms
redundant. Given that linear logic machinery or something like it is
independently needed for semantic interpretation, it seems reasonable to
explore the extent to which it is capable of handling feature structure
constraints as well.
R-LFG represents the extreme position that all linguistically required
feature structure dependencies can be captured by the resource-accounting
machinery of a linear or similiar logic independently needed for semantic
interpretation, making LFG's unification machinery redundant. The goal is to
show that LFG linguistic analyses can be expressed as clearly and perspicuously
using the smaller set of mechanisms of R-LFG as they can using the much larger
set of unification-based mechanisms in LFG: if this is the case then we will
have shown that positing these extra f-structure mechanisms is not
linguistically warranted.Comment: 30 pages, to appear in the the ``Glue Language'' volume edited by
Dalrymple, uses tree-dvips, ipa, epic, eepic, fullnam
Proof Nets and the Complexity of Processing Center-Embedded Constructions
This paper shows how proof nets can be used to formalize the notion of
``incomplete dependency'' used in psycholinguistic theories of the
unacceptability of center-embedded constructions. Such theories of human
language processing can usually be restated in terms of geometrical constraints
on proof nets. The paper ends with a discussion of the relationship between
these constraints and incremental semantic interpretation.Comment: To appear in Proceedings of LACL 95; uses epic.sty, eepic.sty,
rotate.st
Death and Lightness: Using a Demographic Model to Find Support Verbs
Some verbs have a particular kind of binary ambiguity: they can carry their
normal, full meaning, or they can be merely acting as a prop for the nominal
object. It has been suggested that there is a detectable pattern in the
relationship between a verb acting as a prop (a \term{support verb}) and the
noun it supports.
The task this paper undertakes is to develop a model which identifies the
support verb for a particular noun, and by extension, when nouns are
enumerated, a model which disambiguates a verb with respect to its support
status. The paper sets up a basic model as a standard for comparison; it then
proposes a more complex model, and gives some results to support the model's
validity, comparing it with other similar approaches.Comment: LaTeX, 8 pages, uses aclap.st
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