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1
MUC-3 Test Results and Analysis
In: DTIC (1991)
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2
Development and Application of a Military Intelligence (MI) Job Comparison and Analysis Tool (JCAT)
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1991)
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3
Netlist +: A Simple Interface Language for Chip Design
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1991)
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4
An Algorithm for Parsing Flow Graphs
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1984)
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5
Requirements for Natural Language Understanding in a System with Graphic Displays
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1983)
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6
An Overview of the Penman Text Generation System.
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1983)
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7
Limited Connected Speech T&E.
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1981)
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8
Automatic Recognition of Phonemes Using a Syntactic Processor for Error Correction.
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1980)
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9
FLAT: A FORTRAN Language Augmentation Tool
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1980)
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10
Toward a Computational Theory of Indirect Speech Acts.
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1979)
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11
Consolidation of Military Pay and Personnel Functions (Copper). Volume II
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1978)
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12
Representation and Process in Transitive Inference.
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1978)
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13
Alpha/Numeric Extraction Technique Phase II.
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1977)
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14
The Inference of Domain Structure from Informal Process Descriptions
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1977)
Abstract: Understanding informal descriptions of processes requires access to a body of knowledge about the process domain, and the ability to use that knowledge appropriately. A great deal of effort has been spent in developing methods for organizing and using domain knowledge; relatively little has been done to automate acquisition of such knowledge. Since English process descriptions reflect the underlying structure of the process domain, knowledge about that structure may be inferred from the description itself. A categorization of important structural knowledge classes is presented, and a production system described which interprets English-like statements on the basis of existing structural context. A sample of the rules from this system is examined. By assuming conditions required in the rule patterns when a linguistic structure is not interpretable, it is possible to infer a great deal of structural knowledge about a process domain. This incremental growth of domain structure presents an alternative to constructing process understanding systems applicable only to very restricted domains, or requiring extensive additions of domain-specific knowledge by human experts for each new task.
Keyword: *ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE; *COMPUTER PROGRAMMING; *MAN COMPUTER INTERFACE; COMPREHENSION; Computer Programming and Software; FLOW CHARTING; Government and Political Science; INPUT OUTPUT PROCESSING; NATURAL LANGUAGE; SYMBOLIC PROGRAMMING
URL: http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADA048154
http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA048154
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15
JAVS Technical Report. Methodology Report.
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1977)
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16
JAVS Technical Report. User's Guide.
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1977)
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17
Studies and Design Specifications for Computerized Measurement of Textual Comprehensibility.
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1976)
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18
Getting the GIST: A Computational Theory of Sentence Understanding
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1976)
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19
Methodology for Comprehensive Software Testing.
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1975)
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20
A Survey of Speech Understanding Systems Technology.
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1973)
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