1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910808938903321

Titolo

Language processing and grammars : the role of functionally oriented computational models / / edited by Brian Nolan, Carlos Periñán-Pascual

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Amsterdam, Netherlands : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , 2014

©2014

ISBN

90-272-7064-3

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (402 p.)

Collana

Studies in Language Companion Series, , 0165-7763 ; ; Volume 150

Disciplina

006.3/5

Soggetti

Natural language processing (Computer science)

Functionalism (Linguistics)

Generative grammar

Computational linguistics

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters.

Nota di contenuto

Language Processing and Grammars; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; Introduction; References; From the extraction of continuous features in parallel texts to visual analytics of heterogeneous areal-typological datasets; 1. Introduction; 2. Algorithmic typology; 2.1 Degree of synthesis; 2.2 Amount of prefixing and suffixing; 2.3 Amount of case marking; 2.4 Synthetic vs. analytic negation marking; 3. Visual analytics; 4. Combining genealogical and areal information in a single visualization; 4.1 The extended sunburst display; 4.2 User interaction; 4.3 Design decisions

4.4 Meta-information5. Case studies; 5.1 Case study 1: Indo-European languages; 5.2 Case study 2: Languages of Papua New Guinea; 6. Conclusions and outlook; Acknowledgments; References; Lexical-syntactic analysis model of Spanish multi-word expressions; 1. Introduction; 2. Lexicon and syntactic phenomena; 2.1 The Lexicon; 2.2 Lexical and syntactic phenomena; 3. Combinatorial interdependencies; 3.1 Syntagmatic relations; Addition; Ellipsis; Permutation; Versification; 3.2 Paradigmatic relations; Commutation; Deautomatization; Morpho-syntactic invariability features



3.3 Inflectional morphology of complex lexical units3.4 Formal definitions; 3.5 Typology of multi-member lexical units; 4. Formal representation; 5. Conclusions; References; Three-place predicates in RRG; 1. Introduction; 2. RRG accounts to three-place predicates; 3. A new computational model to RRG; 4. Conclusion; References; A Role and Reference Grammar parser for German; 1. Introduction; 1.1 Grammatical features of German; 1.2 The grammar model; 2. German sentence structure in a RRG construction representation; 3. Functional and technical requirements

4. The constructions used for the parser4.1 Construction 1: Die Katze trinkt die Milch; 4.2 Construction 2: Die Katze trank die Milch; 4.3 Construction 3: Die Katze ist auf dem Tisch; 4.4 Construction 4: Trinkt die Katze die Milch; 4.5 Construction 5: Die Katze hat die Milch getrunken; 4.6 Construction 6: Getrunken hat die Katze die Milch; 4.7 Construction 7: Die Milch wird von der Katze getrunken; 4.8 Construction 8: Die Katze hat die Milch auf dem Tisch getrunken; 5. Functional requirements of the parser; 5.1 Sentence structure; 5.2 The lexicon

5.3 The layout of the Role and Reference Grammar structure representation6. Testing and results; 6.1 Testing of construction 1; 6.2 Testing of construction 2; 6.3 Testing of construction 3; 6.4 Testing of construction 4; 6.5 Testing of construction 5; 6.6 Testing of construction 6; 6.7 Testing of construction 7; 6.8 Testing of construction 8; 7. Discussion; 7.1 Purpose; 7.2 Significance of this work; 7.3 Future enhancements; References; Extending a lexicalist functional grammar through speech acts, constructions and conversational software agents; 1. Introduction

2. Intelligent conversational agents

Sommario/riassunto

This paper investigates the notion of low-level situational cognitive model, its role in linguistic description and its possible computational treatment in the knowledge base FunGramKB. Low-level situational models are exploited metonymically to produce situation-based implicatures. When such inferences become stably associated with a formal pattern, they give rise to implicational constructions. Other kinds of construction make use of different kinds of cognitive model. For example, argument-structure constructions are based on high-level non-situational cognitive models. The paper then provi