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Is getting the right answer just about choosing the right words? The role of syntactically-informed features in short answer scoring ...
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Language and computers
Brew, Chris; Meurers, Walt Detmar; Dickinson, Markus. - Chicester : Wiley-Blackwell, 2013
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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3
SemEval-2013 Task 7: The Joint Student Response Analysis and 8th Recognizing Textual Entailment Challenge
In: DTIC (2013)
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4
SemEval-2013 Task 7: The Joint Student Response Analysis and 8th Recognizing Textual Embodiment Challenge
In: Seventh International Workshop on Semantic Evaluation, June 14-15, 2013. Atlanta, Georgia. (2013)
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5
Language and Computers
Dickinson, Markus [Verfasser]; Brew, Chris [Verfasser]; Meurers, Walt Detmar [Verfasser]. - New York, NY : John Wiley & Sons, 2012
DNB Subject Category Language
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6
Language and Computers
Dickinson, Markus Verfasser]. - New York, NY : John Wiley & Sons, 2012
DNB Subject Category Language
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7
Language and Computers
Dickinson, Markus Verfasser]. - New York, NY : Wiley, J, 2012
DNB Subject Category Language
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8
Towards Effective Tutorial Feedback for Explanation Questions: A Dataset and Baselines
In: 2012 Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies, June 3-8, 2012. Montreal, Canada. (2012)
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9
Class-based approach to disambiguating Levin verbs
In: Natural language engineering. - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press 16 (2010) 4, 391-415
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OLC Linguistik
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10
Segmenting words from natural speech: subsegmental variation in segmental cues
In: Journal of child language. - Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press 37 (2010) 3, 513-543
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OLC Linguistik
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11
Multilingual Animacy Classification by Sparse Logistic Regression
Brew, Chris; Baker, Kirk. - : Ohio State University. Department of Linguistics, 2010
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12
Discriminative input stream combination for conditional random field phone recognition
In: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. IEEE transactions on audio, speech and language processing. - New York, NY : Inst. 17 (2009) 8, 1533-1546
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OLC Linguistik
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13
Extending Phone Prediction Models of Word Segmentation to a More Realistic Representation of Prosody
Pate, John. - : The Ohio State University, 2009
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14
A linguistically motivated approach to grapheme-to-phoneme conversion for Korean
In: Computer speech and language. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Elsevier 20 (2006) 4, 357-381
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OLC Linguistik
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15
The Preferred response slopes and two-channel compression ratios in twenty listening conditions by hearing-impaired and normal-hearing listeners and their relationship to the acoustic input
Keidser, Gitte; Brew, Chris; Brewer, Scott. - : Taylor and Francis, 2005
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16
Verb Class Disambiguation Using Informative Priors
In: Computational linguistics. - Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press 30 (2004) 1, 45-74
OLC Linguistik
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17
Verb class disambiguation using informative priors
In: Computational linguistics. - Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press 30 (2004) 1, 45-73
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18
A distributional model of semantic context effects in lexical processinga
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19
Environmental Determinants of Lexical Processing Effort
McDonald, Scott. - : University of Edinburgh. College of Science and Engineering. School of Informatics., 2000
Abstract: Institute for Adaptive and Neural Computation ; A central concern of psycholinguistic research is explaining the relative ease or difficulty involved in processing words. In this thesis, we explore the connection between lexical processing effort and measurable properties of the linguistic environment. Distributional information (information about a word’s contexts of use) is easily extracted from large language corpora in the form of co-occurrence statistics. We claim that such simple distributional statistics can form the basis of a parsimonious model of lexical processing effort. Adopting the purposive style of explanation advocated by the recent rational analysis approach to understanding cognition, we propose that the primary function of the human language processor is to recover meaning from an utterance. We assume that for this task to be efficient, a useful processing strategy is to use prior knowledge in order to build expectations about the meaning of upcoming words. Processing effort can then be seen as reflecting the difference between ‘expected’ meaning and ‘actual’ meaning. Applying the tools of information theory to lexical representations constructed from simple distributional statistics, we show how this quantity can be estimated as the amount of information conveyed by a word about its contexts of use. The hypothesis that properties of the linguistic environment are relevant to lexical processing effort is evaluated against a wide range of empirical data, including both new experimental studies and computational reanalyses of published behavioural data. Phenomena accounted for using the current approach include: both singleword and multiple-word lexical priming, isolated word recognition, the effect of contextual constraint on eye movements during reading, sentence and ‘feature’ priming, and picture naming performance by Alzheimer’s patients. Besides explaining a broad range of empirical findings, our model provides an integrated account of both context-dependent and context-independent processing behaviour, offers an objective alternative to the influential spreading activation model of contextual facilitation, and invites reinterpretation of a number of controversial issues in the literature, such as the word frequency effect and the need for distinct mechanisms to explain semantic and associative priming. We conclude by emphasising the important role of distributional information in explanations of lexical processing effort, and suggest that environmental factors in general should given a more prominent place in theories of human language processing.
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1842/329
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20
Applications (II)
Beaven, John L. (Mitarb.); Brew, Chris (Mitarb.); Dorr, Bonnie Jean (Mitarb.)...
In: COLING <14, 1992, Nantes>. Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics ; 2. Communications thématiques (suite). - Grenoble : IVR Impr. (1992), 595-798
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