05698nam 2200709 450 991046398060332120200903223051.090-272-7064-3(CKB)2670000000548210(EBL)1653559(SSID)ssj0001132471(PQKBManifestationID)11574184(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001132471(PQKBWorkID)11148290(PQKB)10426697(MiAaPQ)EBC1653559(Au-PeEL)EBL1653559(CaPaEBR)ebr10851070(CaONFJC)MIL582570(OCoLC)877885843(EXLCZ)99267000000054821020140331h20142014 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrLanguage processing and grammars the role of functionally oriented computational models /edited by Brian Nolan, Carlos Periñán-PascualAmsterdam, Netherlands :John Benjamins Publishing Company,2014.©20141 online resource (402 p.)Studies in Language Companion Series,0165-7763 ;Volume 150Description based upon print version of record.90-272-5915-1 Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters.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 decisions4.4 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 features3.3 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 requirements4. 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 lexicon5.3 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. Introduction2. Intelligent conversational agentsThis 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 proviStudies in language companion series ;Volume 150.Natural language processing (Computer science)Functionalism (Linguistics)Generative grammarComputational linguisticsElectronic books.Natural language processing (Computer science)Functionalism (Linguistics)Generative grammar.Computational linguistics.006.3/5Nolan Brian1952-Periñán Pascual CarlosMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910463980603321Language processing and grammars2060000UNINA