DE eng

Search in the Catalogues and Directories

Page: 1 2
Hits 1 – 20 of 24

1
Chinese-English Biology and Chemistry Abstract Parallel Text
Doran, Christine; Burger, John D.; Henderson, John C.. - : Linguistic Data Consortium, 2013. : https://www.ldc.upenn.edu, 2013
BASE
Show details
2
Chinese-English Biology and Chemistry Abstract Parallel Text ...
Doran, Christine; Burger, John D.; Henderson, John C.. - : Linguistic Data Consortium, 2013
BASE
Show details
3
Evaluation of 2-way Iraqi Arabic-English speech translation systems using automated metrics
In: Machine translation. - Dordrecht [u.a.] : Springer Science + Business Media 26 (2012) 1-2, 159-176
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
Show details
4
Chinese-English Semiconductor Parallel Text
Doran, Christine; Burger, John D.; Henderson, John C.. - : Linguistic Data Consortium, 2012. : https://www.ldc.upenn.edu, 2012
BASE
Show details
5
Russian-English Computer Security Parallel Text
Doran, Christine; Burger, John D.; Henderson, John C.. - : Linguistic Data Consortium, 2012. : https://www.ldc.upenn.edu, 2012
BASE
Show details
6
Russian-English Computer Security Parallel Text ...
Doran, Christine; Burger, John D.; Henderson, John C.. - : Linguistic Data Consortium, 2012
BASE
Show details
7
Chinese-English Semiconductor Parallel Text ...
Doran, Christine; Burger, John D.; Henderson, John C.. - : Linguistic Data Consortium, 2012
BASE
Show details
8
ACE 2005 English SpatialML Annotations Version 2
Doran, Christine; Mani, Inderjeet; Clancy, Seamus. - : Linguistic Data Consortium, 2011. : https://www.ldc.upenn.edu, 2011
BASE
Show details
9
ACE 2005 English SpatialML Annotations Version 2 ...
Doran, Christine; Mani, Inderjeet; Clancy, Seamus. - : Linguistic Data Consortium, 2011
BASE
Show details
10
ACE 2005 Mandarin SpatialML Annotations
Wang, Xiaoman; Doran, Christine; Hitzeman, Janet. - : Linguistic Data Consortium, 2010. : https://www.ldc.upenn.edu, 2010
BASE
Show details
11
ACE 2005 Mandarin SpatialML Annotations ...
Wang, Xiaoman; Doran, Christine; Hitzeman, Janet. - : Linguistic Data Consortium, 2010
BASE
Show details
12
MITRE 1997 Mandarin Broadcast News Speech Translations (HUB-4NE)
Doran, Christine; Henderson, John; Palmer, Justin. - : Linguistic Data Consortium, 2007. : https://www.ldc.upenn.edu, 2007
BASE
Show details
13
MITRE 1997 Mandarin Broadcast News Speech Translations (HUB-4NE) ...
Doran, Christine; Henderson, John; Palmer, Justin. - : Linguistic Data Consortium, 2007
BASE
Show details
14
Current and new directions in discourse and dialogue
Ebert, Christian (Mitarb.); Healey, Patrick (Mitarb.); Traum, David R. (Mitarb.). - Dordrecht [u.a.] : Kluwer, 2003
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
Show details
15
Microplanning with Communicative Intentions: The SPUD System ...
BASE
Show details
16
Exploring Speech-Enabled Dialogue with the Galaxy Communicator Infrastructure
In: DTIC (2001)
BASE
Show details
17
Tree adjoining grammars : formalisms, linguistic analysis and processing
Issac, Fabrice (Mitarb.); Sarkar, Anoop (Mitarb.); Joshi, Aravind K. (Mitarb.). - Stanford, Calif. : CSLI Publ., 2000
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
Show details
18
Incorporating Punctuation Into the Sentence Grammar: A Lexicalized Tree Adjoining Grammar Perspective
In: IRCS Technical Reports Series (1998)
BASE
Show details
19
Incorporating punctuation into the sentence grammar: A lexicalized tree adjoining grammar perspective
In: Dissertations available from ProQuest (1998)
Abstract: Punctuation helps us to structure, and thus to understand, texts. Many uses of punctuation straddle the line between syntax and discourse, because they serve to combine multiple propositions within a single orthographic sentence. They allows us to insert discourse-level relations at the level of a single sentence. Just as people make use of information from punctuation in processing what they read, computers can use information from punctuation in processing texts automatically. Most current natural language processing systems fail to take punctuation into account at all, losing a valuable source of information about the text. Those which do mostly do so in a superficial way, again failing to fully exploit the information conveyed by punctuation. To be able to make use of such information in a computational system, we must first characterize its uses and find a suitable representation for encoding them. The work here focuses on extending a syntactic grammar to handle phenomena occurring within a single sentence which have punctuation as an integral component. Punctuation marks are treated as full-fledged lexical items in a Lexicalized Tree Adjoining Grammar, which is an extremely well-suited formalism for encoding punctuation in the sentence grammar. Each mark anchors its own elementary trees and imposes constraints on the surrounding lexical items. I have analyzed data representing a wide variety of constructions, and added treatments of them to the large English grammar which is part of the XTAG system. The advantages of using LTAG are that its elementary units are structured trees of a suitable size for stating the constraints we are interested in, and the derivation histories it produces contain information the discourse grammar will need about which elementary units have used and how they have been combined. I also consider in detail a few particularly interesting constructions where the sentence and discourse grammars meet--appositives, reported speech and uses of parentheses. My results confirm that punctuation can be used in analyzing sentences to increase the coverage of the grammar, reduce the ambiguity of certain word sequences and facilitate discourse-level processing of the texts.
Keyword: Linguistics
URL: https://repository.upenn.edu/dissertations/AAI9829892
BASE
Hide details
20
Paying Heed to Collocations
In: DTIC (1996)
BASE
Show details

Page: 1 2

Catalogues
2
0
1
0
0
0
0
Bibliographies
3
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Linked Open Data catalogues
0
Online resources
0
0
0
0
Open access documents
21
0
0
0
0
© 2013 - 2024 Lin|gu|is|tik | Imprint | Privacy Policy | Datenschutzeinstellungen ändern