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Computational Linguistics and Intelligent Text Processing
Author(s) -
José M. Castaño
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
lecture notes in computer science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Book series
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.249
H-Index - 400
eISSN - 1611-3349
pISSN - 0302-9743
DOI - 10.1007/3-540-36456-0
Subject(s) - computer science , natural language processing , computational linguistics , linguistics , artificial intelligence , applied linguistics , philosophy
For the specification of formal systems for a grammar formalism, conventional mathematical wisdom dictates that we start with primitives (basic primitive structures or building blocks) as simple as possible and then introduce various operations for constructing more complex structures. Alternatively, we can start with complex (more complicated) primitives that directly capture crucial linguistic properties and then introduce some general operations (language independent operations) for composing them. This latter approach has led to the so-called strongly lexicalized grammars, providing some new insights into syntactic description, semantic composition, discourse structure, language generation, psycholinguistic and statistical processing, all with computational implications. In this paper, we will illustrate some of these insights in the context of the lexicalized tree-adjoining grammar (LTAG).

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