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1
Investigation of the Distributions, Derivation, and Generalizations in Arabic Plural System
Alrashed, Fahad. - 2021
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2
Perceptual Asymmetry and Sound Change: An Articulatory, Acoustic/Perceptual, and Computational Analysis
Calloway, Ian. - 2020
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3
Linguistic Phylogeny with Bayesian Markov Chain Monte Carlo: The Case of Indo-European
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4
Practical Natural Language Processing for Low-Resource Languages.
Abstract: As the Internet and World Wide Web have continued to gain widespread adoption, the linguistic diversity represented has also been growing. Simultaneously the field of Linguistics is facing a crisis of the opposite sort. Languages are becoming extinct faster than ever before and linguists now estimate that the world could lose more than half of its linguistic diversity by the year 2100. This is a special time for Computational Linguistics; this field has unprecedented access to a great number of low-resource languages, readily available to be studied, but needs to act quickly before political, social, and economic pressures cause these languages to disappear from the Web. Most work in Computational Linguistics and Natural Language Processing (NLP) focuses on English or other languages that have text corpora of hundreds of millions of words. In this work, we present methods for automatically building NLP tools for low-resource languages with minimal need for human annotation in these languages. We start first with language identification, specifically focusing on word-level language identification, an understudied variant that is necessary for processing Web text and develop highly accurate machine learning methods for this problem. From there we move onto the problems of part-of-speech tagging and dependency parsing. With both of these problems we extend the current state of the art in projected learning to make use of multiple high-resource source languages instead of just a single language. In both tasks, we are able to improve on the best current methods. All of these tools are practically realized in the "Minority Language Server," an online tool that brings these techniques together with low-resource language text on the Web. The Minority Language Server, starting with only a few words in a language can automatically collect text in a language, identify its language and tag its parts of speech. We hope that this system is able to provide a convincing proof of concept for the automatic collection and processing of low-resource language text from the Web, and one that can hopefully be realized before it is too late.
Keyword: Natural Language Processing
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/113373
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5
Using Natural Language Processing to Mine Multiple Perspectives from Social Media and Scientific Literature.
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6
Morphological Inference from Bitext for Resource-Poor Languages.
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7
The human language project: building a universal corpus of the world's languages
In: Association for Computational Linguistics. Proceedings of the conference. - Stroudsburg, Penn. : ACL 48 (2010) 1, 88-97
BLLDB
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8
Semisupervised learning for computational linguistics
Abney, Steven P.. - Boca Raton [u.a.] : Chapman & Hall, 2008
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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9
Automatic tense and *aspect translation between Chinese and English.
Ye, Yang. - 2007
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10
Understanding the Yarowsky algorithm
In: Computational linguistics. - Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press 30 (2004) 3, 365-395
BLLDB
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11
"Empirical Linguistics. Geoffrey Sampson (University of Sussex), London: Continuum (Open linguistics series), 2001, VIII + 226 pp" [Rezension]
In: Computational linguistics. - Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press 28 (2002) 4, 573-575
BLLDB
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12
Stochastic Attribute-Value Grammars
In: Computational linguistics. - Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press 23 (1997) 4, 597-618
OLC Linguistik
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13
Stochastic attribute-value grammars
In: Computational linguistics. - Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press 23 (1997) 4, 597-618
BLLDB
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14
Partial parsing via finite-state cascades
In: Natural language engineering. - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press 2 (1996) 4, 337-344
BLLDB
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15
Chunks and dependencies : bringing processing evidence to bear on syntax
In: Linguistics and computation. - Stanford, Calif. : Center for the Study of Language and Information (1995), 145-164
BLLDB
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16
Principle-Based Parsing: Computation and Psycholinguistics
In: Computational linguistics. - Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press 19 (1993) 2, 393-396
OLC Linguistik
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17
Parsing arguments : phrase structure and argument structure as determinants of initial parsing decisions
In: Journal of memory and language. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Elsevier 30 (1991) 2, 251-271
BLLDB
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18
Memory requirements and local ambiguities of parsing strategies
In: Journal of psycholinguistic research. - New York, NY ; London [u.a.] : Springer 20 (1991) 3, 233-250
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19
Syntactic affixation and performance structures
In: Views on phrase structure (Dordrecht [etc.], 1991), P. 215-228
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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20
Parsing by chunks
In: Principle-based parsing (Dordrecht [etc.], 1991), P. 257-278
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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