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9780262231824

Electric Words

by ; ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780262231824

  • ISBN10:

    0262231824

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 1996-01-23
  • Publisher: Bradford Books

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Summary

The use of computers to understand words continues to be an area of burgeoning research. Electric Wordsis the first general survey of and introduction to the entire range of work in lexical linguistics and corpora-the study of such on-line resources as dictionaries and other texts-in the broader fields of natural-language processing and artificial intelligence. The authors integrate and synthesize the goals and methods of computational lexicons in relation to AI's sister disciplines of philosophy, linguistics, and psychology. One of the underlying messages of the book is that current research should be guided by both computational and theoretical tools and not only by statistical techniques-that matters have gone far beyond counting to encompass the difficult province of meaning itself and how it can be formally expressed. Electric Wordsdelves first into the philosophical background of the study of meaning, specifically word meaning, then into the early work on treating dictionaries as texts, the first serious efforts at extracting information from machine-readable dictionaries (MRDs), and the conversion of MRDs into usable lexical knowledge bases. The authors provide a comparative survey of worldwide work on extracting usable structures from dictionaries for computational-linguistic purposes and a discussion of how those structures differ from or interact with structures derived from standard texts (or corpora). Also covered are automatic techniques for analyzing MRDs, genus hierarchies and networks, numerical methods of language processing related to dictionaries, automatic processing of bilingual dictionaries, and consumer projects using MRDs.

Author Biography

Yorick A. Wilks is Professor of Computer Science at the University of Sheffield.

Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Machine-Readable Texts and Dictionaries
A Short History of Meaning
Meaning as Nonsymbolic
Intermediate Cases
Meaning as Symbolic
Meaning as Reference
Meaning as Physical Manipulation, Action, or Behavior
Verificationism
Procedural Semantics
Fregean Functionalism
Connectionism
Meaning and Information Theory
Meanings as Stereotypes
Symbolic Accounts of Definitional Meaning
Truth Conditions as a Theory of Meaning
Meaning as Deductive or Inferential Relations
Meaning as Equivalent to Symbolic Structures
Primitives in Meaning Definition
Escape Arguments
Putnam's Argument
Charniak's Argument
Toward a Clearer View of Semantic Primitives
Wordbooks as Human Artifacts: Dictionaries and Thesauri
The Standard Dictionary
The Classic Thesaurus
Bilingual Dictionaries
Style Dictionaries
Concordances
Are there Psychological Constraints on Dictionaries?
Are Word Senses Real?
Kay's Mental Lexicon vs. Concrete Dictionaries
Further Problems with Dictionaries
Early Computational Approaches: Tasks and Tools
Computing Over Whole Dictionaries: Olney and Revard at SDC
Amsler's Thesis
Michiel's Early Work on LDOCE
Lattices and Thesauri
Sparck Jones's Thesis and the Transition to Information Retrieval
Information Retrieval and Thesauri
Up to Modern Times: Wilks on Theasuri and Frames
Text Analysis and its Relationship to Dictionaries: Dictionaries as Texts
The Dictionary as a Text: LDOCE and COBUILD
LDOCE: A Basic MRD
COBUILD
Dictionaries as Texts
Cheng-Ming Guo: Deriving Semantic Primitives from MRD
Dictionaries as Knowledge Structures
Text Analysis on a Large Scale
TIPSTER
The NMSU-Brandeis System
Tuning GLS Entries Against a Corpus
Walker and Amsler
Pathtrieve
Pathfinder Networks
The Construction of Modern Lexicons
Lexicons vs. Wordbooks
AI and Linguistic Principles of Lexicon (Re)construction
Dorr (1991): UNITRAN Machine Translation
Using the Grammar Coding System of LDOCE
AI and Psychological Principles of Lexicon (Re)construction
WordNet
The CyC Project
Lexical Acquisition from Human Subjects
NMSU's Pathfinder
Lexical Acquisition from Texts
Lexical Workbenches: Carnegie Mellon's ONTOS and MCC's LUKE
Extended-Aspect Calculus
The "Neutral Lexicon"?
Automatic Techniques for Analyzing Machine-Readable Dictionaries
Pattern Matching and Parsing
Explicit and Implicit Dictionary Information
Methodological Issues in the Analysis of Machine-Readable Dictionaries
Database Approaches to the Machine-Tractable Dictionary
IBM: Dictionary Entry Parsing
Semantic Approaches to the Machine-Tractable Dictionary
Boguraev and Levin
Defining Formulas and the Relational Lexicon: Illinois and Liege
Categories for Prepositions
The NMSU School
NMSU: The Defining Spiral
The SPIRAL Procedure
The ARC Procedure
The NMSU Lexicon Provider
Constructing the Lexicon
Contextual Structure
Enriching Frames
The Tree Interpreter
Alshawi
The Dutch School: Tagging the LDOCE "Corpus"
Genus Hierarchies and Networks
The Basic Technique
Overview of the Work
Extracting Semantic Networks from LDOCE
Finding the Genus Term
The Empty Head Heuristic
The Disambiguated Network of Noun Senses--NounSense
Evaluation
General Topology
Statistics
Numerical Methods for Language Processing
Techniques for Aiding in the Construction of Dictionaries
Limited Domains
Disambiguation Relative to Translations into Another Language
Disambiguation Relative to a Single Language
CRL Techniques for Word Sense Disambiguation in Dictionaries
Co-occurrence Neighborhoods
Subject-Dependent Neighborhoods
Word Sense Disambiguation in General Texts
Lexical Disambiguation Using Simulated Annealing
Simulated Annealing
Word-Sense Disambiguation with Simulated Annealing
Experiments
Automatic Processing of Bilingual Dictionaries
Bilingual Dictionaries
The ACQUILEX Project
Catizone, Russel, and Warwick
White
Klavans and Tzoukermann
Neff and McCord
The NMSU Computing Research Laboratory
NORM: The CRL Translator's Assistant
Consumer Projects Using Machine-Readable Dictionaries
The Automatic Creation of Lexical Entries for Machine Translation
ULTRA
The System of Intermediate Representation
The Language Components
ULTRA's Lexicons
The Automatic Construction of Lexical Items
Approaches to Achieving Full Specification
Pangloss
Lexical Levels: An Overview of the Lexicons
Spanish Lexical Entries
Intermediate Representations
English Lexical Entries for Generation
Interdependence and Uniformity of Representations
Use of Automated Procedures
Conclusion
Slator's PREMO: Knowledge-Based Parsing
Language Objects
Control Structure
Text Structure
Text Lexicon
IBM: Deciding Attachments
The Present
Piggybacking a Dictionary from a Corpus and a "Seed" MRD
New Modes of Dictionary Construction
The Japanese EDR Project
The New Cambridge Dictionary
The Oxford-DEC dictionary: The Hector Project
Organizational Developments
ACQUILEX
The "Survey of NLP Lexicons"
The Linguistic Data Consortium
The Consortium for Lexical Research
Resources and Services of the Consortium
Conclusion: Evaluating Lexicons?
Is the MRD Era Over?
References
Index
Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved.

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