1 |
One model for the learning of language.
|
|
|
|
In: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol 119, iss 5 (2022)
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
2 |
Hebrew Transformed: Machine Translation of Hebrew Using the Transformer Architecture
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
3 |
Arc-Eager Construction Provides Learning Advantage Beyond Stack Management
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
4 |
Controlled Multilingual Thesauri for Kazakh Industry-Specific Terms
|
|
|
|
In: Social Inclusion ; 9 ; 1 ; 35-44 ; Social Inclusion and Multilingualism: The Impact of Linguistic Justice, Economy of Language and Language Policy (2021)
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
5 |
Assembling Syntax: Modeling Constituent Questions in a Grammar Engineering Framework
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
6 |
THE FUTURE TENSE PROPERTIES of UYGHUR and TURKISH
|
|
|
|
In: Zeitschrift für die Welt der Türken / Journal of World of Turks; Vol 12, No 2 (2020): [ZFWT] VOL. 12, NO. 2 (2020); 69-80 (2020)
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
7 |
Linguistic Phylogeny with Bayesian Markov Chain Monte Carlo: The Case of Indo-European
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
8 |
Issues in Named Entity Recognition on Early Modern English Letters
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
9 |
Detection of Longitudinal Development of Dementia in Literary Writing
|
|
|
|
In: http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1524651391474684 (2018)
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
10 |
Movement and structure effects on Universal 20 word order frequencies: A quantitative study
|
|
|
|
In: Glossa: a journal of general linguistics; Vol 3, No 1 (2018); 84 ; 2397-1835 (2018)
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
11 |
Towards a Gold Standard Corpus for Variable Detection and Linking in Social Science Publications
|
|
|
|
In: Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC) ; International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC) ; 11 (2018)
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
12 |
Mining Social Science Publications for Survey Variables
|
|
|
|
In: Proceedings of the Second Workshop on NLP and Computational Social Science ; 47-52 (2018)
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
13 |
Resonances in Middle High German: New Methodologies in Prosody
|
|
|
|
In: Hench, Christopher Leo. (2017). Resonances in Middle High German: New Methodologies in Prosody. UC Berkeley: German. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/13c6h2z2 (2017)
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
14 |
The Influence of Syntactic Frequencies on Human Sentence Processing
|
|
|
|
In: http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1502452939626929 (2017)
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
15 |
Learning novel phonotactics from exposure to continuous speech
|
|
|
|
In: Laboratory Phonology: Journal of the Association for Laboratory Phonology; Vol 8, No 1 (2017); 12 ; 1868-6354 (2017)
|
|
Abstract:
Knowledge of phonotactics is commonly assumed to derive from the lexicon. However, computational studies have suggested that phonotactic constraints might arise before the lexicon is in place, in particular from co-occurrences in continuous speech. The current study presents two artificial language learning experiments aimed at testing whether phonotactic learning can take place in the absence of words. Dutch participants were presented with novel consonant constraints embedded in continuous artificial languages. Vowels occurred at random, which resulted in an absence of recurring word forms in the speech stream. In Experiment 1 participants with different training languages showed significantly different preferences on a set of novel test items. However, only one of the two languages resulted in preferences that were above chance-level performance. In Experiment 2 participants were exposed to a control language without novel statistical cues. Participants did not develop a preference for either phonotactic structure in the test items. An analysis of Dutch phonotactics indicated that the failure to induce novel phonotactics in one condition might have been due to interference from the native language. Our findings suggest that novel phonotactics can be learned from continuous speech, but participants have difficulty learning novel patterns that go against the native language.
|
|
Keyword:
computational linguistics; constraint induction; Linguistics; phonological acquisition; phonology; phonotactics; psycholinguistics; speech segmentation; statistical learning
|
|
URL: https://doi.org/10.5334/labphon.20 https://www.journal-labphon.org/jms/article/view/labphon.20
|
|
BASE
|
|
Hide details
|
|
16 |
Machine-readable text corpora and the linguistic description of languages
|
|
|
|
In: Text analysis and computers ; 1 ; ZUMA-Nachrichten Spezial ; 64-75 ; Text Analysis and Computers Conference (2017)
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
17 |
Code-switched English Pronunciation Modeling for Swahili Spoken Term Detection (Pub Version, Open Access)
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
18 |
Sentiment Big Data Flow Analysis by Means of Dynamic Linguistic Patterns
|
|
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
19 |
Making the Most of It: Word Sense Annotation and Disambiguation in the Face of Data Sparsity and Ambiguity
|
|
|
|
In: Jurgens, David Alan. (2014). Making the Most of It: Word Sense Annotation and Disambiguation in the Face of Data Sparsity and Ambiguity. UCLA: Computer Science 0201. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/2wn4h7ph (2014)
|
|
BASE
|
|
Show details
|
|
|
|