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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
201

ME-CSSR : an extension of CSSR using maximum entropy models

Padró, Muntsa, Padró, Lluís January 2008 (has links)
In this work an extension of CSSR algorithm using Maximum Entropy Models is introduced. Preliminary experiments to perform Named Entity Recognition with this new system are presented.
202

ExPRESS : extraction pattern recognition engine and specification suite

Piskorski, Jakub January 2008 (has links)
The emergence of information extraction (IE) oriented pattern engines has been observed during the last decade. Most of them exploit heavily finite-state devices. This paper introduces ExPRESS – a new extraction pattern engine, whose rules are regular expressions over flat feature structures. The underlying pattern language is a blend of two previously introduced IE oriented pattern formalisms, namely, JAPE, used in the widely known GATE system, and the unificationbased XTDL formalism used in SProUT. A brief and technical overview of ExPRESS, its pattern language and the pool of its native linguistic components is given. Furthermore, the implementation of the grammar interpreter is addressed too.
203

On resolving long distance dependencies in Russian verbs

Saléschus, Dirk January 2008 (has links)
Morphological analyses based on word syntax approaches can encounter difficulties with long distance dependencies. The reason is that in some cases an affix has to have access to the inner structure of the form with which it combines. One solution is the percolation of features from ther inner morphemes to the outer morphemes with some process of feature unification. However, the obstacle of percolation constraints or stipulated features has lead some linguists to argue in favour of other frameworks such as, e.g., realizational morphology or parallel approaches like optimality theory. This paper proposes a linguistic analysis of two long distance dependencies in the morphology of Russian verbs, namely secondary imperfectivization and deverbal nominalization.We show how these processes can be reanalysed as local dependencies. Although finitestate frameworks are not bound by such linguistically motivated considerations, we present an implementation of our analysis as proposed in [1] that does not complicate the grammar or enlarge the network unproportionally.
204

Transducers from parallel replace rules and modes with generalized lenient composition

Yli-Jyrä, Anssi January 2008 (has links)
Generalized Two-Level Grammar (GTWOL) provides a new method for compilation of parallel replacement rules into transducers. The current paper identifies the role of generalized lenient composition (GLC) in this method. Thanks to the GLC operation, the compilation method becomes bipartite and easily extendible to capture various application modes. In the light of three notions of obligatoriness, a modification to the compilation method is proposed. We argue that the bipartite design makes implementation of parallel obligatoriness, directionality, length and rank based application modes extremely easy, which is the main result of the paper.
205

Finite-state rule deduction for parsing non-constituent coordination

Zarrieß, Sina, Seeker, Wolfgang January 2008 (has links)
In this paper, we present a finite-state approach to constituency and therewith an analysis of coordination phenomena involving so-called non-constituents. We show that non-constituents can be seen as parts of fully-fledged constituents and therefore be coordinated in the same way. We have implemented an algorithm based on finite state automata that generates an LFG grammar assigning valid analyses to non-constituent coordination structures in the German language.
206

Prosody in conversational questions

Selting, Margret January 1992 (has links)
My analysis of question-word questions in conversational question-answer sequences results in the decomposition of the conversational question into three systems of constitutive cues, which signal and contextualize the particular activity type in conversational interaction: (1) syntactic structure, (2) semantic relation to prior turn, and (3) prosody. These components are used and combined by interlocutors to distinguish between different activity types which (4) sequentially implicate different types of answers by the recipient in the next turn. Prosody is only one cooccurring cue, but in some cases it is the only distinctive one. It is shown that prosody, and in particular intonation, cannot be determined or even systematically related to syntactic sentence structure type or other sentence-grammatical principles, as most former and current theories of intonation postulate. Instead, prosody is an independent, autonomous signalling system, which is used as a contextualization device for the constitution of interactively relevant activity types in conversation.
207

Emphatic speech style : with special focus on the prosodic signalling of heightened emotive involvement in conservation

Selting, Margret January 1994 (has links)
After a review of previous work on the prosody of emotional involvement, data extracts from natural conversations are analyzed in order to argue for the constitution of an 'emphatic (speech) style', which linguistic devices are used to signal heightened emotive involvement. Participants use prosodic cues, in co-occurrence with syntactic and lexical cues, to contextualize turn-constructional units as 'emphatic'. Only realizations of prosodic categories that are marked in relation to surrounding uses of these categories have the power to contextualize units as displaying 'more-than-normal involvement'. In the appropriate context, and in cooccurrence with syntactic and lexical cues and sequential position, the context-sensitive interpretation of this involvement is 'emphasis'. Prosodic marking is used in addition to various unmarked cues that signal and constitute different activity types in conversation. Emphatic style highlights and reinforms particular conversational activities, and makes certain types of recipient responses locally relevant. In particular, switches from non-emphatic to emphatic style are used to contextualize 'peaks of involvement' or 'climaxes' in story-telling. These are shown in the paper to be 'staged' by speakers and treated by recipients as marked activities calling for displays of alignment with respect to the matter at hand. Signals of emphasis are deployable as techniques for locally organizing demonstrations of shared understanding and participant reciprocity in conversational interaction.
208

Ebenenwechsel und Kooperationsprobleme in einem Sozialamtsgespräch

Selting, Margret January 1985 (has links)
Inhalt: 1. Einleitung 2. „Formelle" und ,,informelle" Ebene 3. Analyse der Gesprächsebenen 4. Analyse von Kooperationsproblemen 5. Zusammenfassung und Ausblick
209

Fremdkorrekturen als Manifestationsformen von Verständigungsproblemen

Selting, Margret January 1987 (has links)
Inhalt: 1. Einleitung 2. Das Problembehandlungsschema und die Analysekategorien 3. Korrekturtypen 3.1. Unmarkierte Ersetzung eines Bezugselements der voraufgegangenen Äußerung 3.2. Markierte Ersetzung eines Einzelelements der voraufgegangenen Äußerung 3.3. Markierte Ersetzung einer gesamten Bezugsäußerung 4. Präferenzstrukturen 5. Gemeinsamkeitsunterstellungen bei Selbst- und Fremdzuschreibungen von Verstehens- und Verständigungsproblemen
210

Institutionelle Kommunikation : Stilwechsel als Mittel strategischer Interaktion

Selting, Margret January 1983 (has links)
Inhalt: 1 Einleitung 2 Zum Sprechstil Umgangssprache als Bezugsstil 3 Gesprächssteuerung: thematische Steuerung von Sachverhaltsdarstellungen 3.1 Gesprächssteuerung gegenüber Hörern 3.2 Gesprächssteuerung gegenüber Experten 4 Stilwechsel 4.1 Stilwechsel gegenüber Hörern 4.2 Stilwechsel gegenüber Experten 5 Pragmatische Konsequenzen

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