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The following links have been tagged syntactic by users just like you, because these resources are off-site we cannot guarantee the accuracy or quality of any third-party information.
- Robust
accurate
statistical
annotation of
general text: (2002)We
describe a
robust
accurate
domain-indepen
dent approach
to statistical
parsing
incorporated
into the new
release of the
ANLT toolkit,
and publicly
available as a
research tool.
The system has
been used to
parse many
well known
corpora in
order to
produce data
for lexical
acquisition
efforts; it
has also been
used as a
component in
an open-domain
question
answering
project. The
performance of
the system is
competitive
with that of
statistical
parsers using
highly
lexicalised
parse
selection...T
Briscoe, J
Carroll
Source: (2002) - Constructing
semantic space
models from
parsed corpora: (2003)Traditio
nal
vector-based
models use
word
co-occurrence
counts from
large corpora
to represent
lexical
meaning. In
this paper we
present a
novel approach
for
constructing
semantic
spaces that
takes
syntactic
relations into
account. We
introduce a
formalisation
for this class
of models and
evaluate their
adequacy on
two modelling
tasks:
semantic
priming and
automatic
discrimination
of lexical
relations.S
Pado, M Lapata
Source: (2003) - The second
release of the
RASP system: (2006), pp.
77-80.Ted
Briscoe, John
Carroll,
Rebecca Watson
Source: (2006), pp. 77-80. - Syntactic
Priming in
Immediate
Recall of
Sentences: Journal of
Memory and
Language, Vol.
38, No. 3.
(April 1998),
pp. 265-282.
In two
previous
papers
(Lombardi &
Potter, 1992;
Potter &
Lombardi,
1990) we
reported
evidence that
immediate
recall of a
sentence
requires
regeneration
from the
message level,
rather than
from a
verbatim
representation
. However,
participants
tended to
reproduce the
surface syntax
even when
there were two
meaning-equiva
lent surface
structures
available
(e.g., for
dative verbs,
"gave the
letter to her
mother," "gave
her mother the
letter"). In
three
experiments we
tested the
hypothesis
that this
verbatim bias
is the result
of syntactic
priming (Bock,
1986). In
Experiment 1
single
sentences were
recalled; the
prime sentence
preceded the
target dative
sentence. In
Experiments 2
and 3
two-clause
sentences were
recalled; the
second clause
served as a
prime that had
been perceived
but not yet
recalled when
the first
clause was
produced, or
vice versa.
When the prime
sentence or
clause was a
dative that
mismatched the
surface
structure of
the target
there was an
increase in
changes to the
alternate
(primed)
structure in
recall of the
target,
compared with
control
primes. These
results
support the
hypothesis
that simply
perceiving a
sentence is
enough to
prime its
surface
syntactic
structure,
contributing
to verbatim
recall.
Copyright 1998
Academic
Press.MC
Potter, L
Lombardi
Source: Journal of Memory and Language, Vol. 38, No. 3. (April 1998), pp. 265-282. - Syntactic
priming in
language
production: Trends in
Cognitive
Sciences, Vol.
3, No. 4. (1
April 1999),
pp. 136-141.
People have a
tendency to
repeat the
types of
sentences they
use during
language
production.
Recent
experimental
work has shown
that this
phenomenon is
at least
partly due to
'syntactic
priming',
whereby the
act of
processing an
utterance with
a particular
form
facilitates
processing a
subsequent
utterance with
the same or a
related form.
In this
review, we
first provide
an overview of
the evidence
for syntactic
priming. The
review will
then explore
the
implications
of this
research for
three
different
areas of
language
theory: the
possible
functional
significance
of syntactic
priming in
coordinating
speakers
during
dialogue, the
mechanisms
underlying
sentence
production,
and the nature
of linguistic
representation
.MJ Pickering,
HP Branigan
Source: Trends in Cognitive Sciences, Vol. 3, No. 4. (1 April 1999), pp. 136-141. - Augmented
trading: From
news articles
to stock price
predictions
using
syntactic
analysis: (2004)This
thesis tries
to answer the
question how
to predict the
reaction of
the stock
market to news
articles using
the latest
suitable
developments
in Natural
Language
Processing.
This is done
using text
classification
where a new
article is
matched to a
category of
articles which
have a certain
influence on
the stock
price. The
thesis first
discusses why
analysis of
news articles
is a feasible
approach to
predicting the
stock market
and why
analysis of
past prices
should not be
build upon.
From...Arthur
van Bunningen
Source: (2004) - Syntactic
semigroups: (1997)Introduc
tion This
chapter gives
an overview on
what is often
called the
algebraic
theory of
finite
automata. It
deals with
languages,
automata and
semigroups,
and has
connections
with model
theory in
logic, boolean
circuits,
symbolic
dynamics and
topology.
Kleene's
theorem [70]
is usually
considered as
the foundation
of this
theory. It
shows that the
class of
recognizable
languages
(i.e.
recognized by
finite
automata),
coincides with
the class of
rational
languages,
which are
given by...J
Pin
Source: (1997) - Semantic
patches for
documenting
and automating
collateral
evolutions in
Linux device
drivers: (2006)Yoann
Padioleau,
Ren&\#233;
Hansen, Julia
Lawall, Gilles
Muller
Source: (2006) - Spanish?Englis
h L2 speakers?
use of
subcategorizat
ion bias
information in
the resolution
of temporary
ambiguity
during second
language
reading: Acta
Psychologica,
Vol. 128, No.
3. (July
2008), pp.
501-513.Using
a self-paced
moving window
reading
paradigm, we
examine the
degree to
which
structural
commitments
made while 60
Spanish–
;English L2
speakers read
syntactically
ambiguous
sentences in
their second
language (L2)
are
constrained by
the
verb’s
lexical entry
about its
preferred
structural
environment
(i.e.,
subcategorizat
ion bias). The
ambiguity
under
investigation
arises because
a noun phrase
immediately
following a
verb can be
parsed as
either the
direct object
of the verb
‘The
CIA director
confirmed the
rumor when he
testified
before
Congressȁ
9;, or as the
subject of an
embedded
complement
‘The
CIA director
confirmed the
rumor could
mean a
security
leak’.
In an
experiment
with 59
monolingual
English
participants,
we replicate
the findings
reported in
the previous
literature
demonstrating
that native
speakers are
guided by
subcategorizat
ion bias
information
during
sentence
interpretation
. In a
bilingual
experiment, we
then show that
L2
subcategorizat
ion biases
influence L2
sentence
interpretation
. The results
indicate that
L2 speakers
keep track of
the relative
frequencies of
verb-subcatego
rization
alternatives
and use this
information
when building
structure in
the L2.P
Dussias, T
Cramerscaltz
Source: Acta Psychologica, Vol. 128, No. 3. (July 2008), pp. 501-513. - Immediate
effects of
form-class
constraints on
spoken word
recognition: Cognition,
Vol. 108, No.
3. (September
2008), pp.
866-873.In
many domains
of cognitive
processing
there is
strong support
for bottom-up
priority and
delayed
top-down
(contextual)
integration.
We ask whether
this applies
to
supra-lexical
context that
could
potentially
constrain
lexical
access.
Previous
findings of
early context
integration in
word
recognition
have typically
used
constraints
that can be
linked to
pair-wise
conceptual
relations
between words.
Using an
artificial
lexicon, we
found
immediate
integration of
syntactic
expectations
based on
pragmatic
constraints
linked to
syntactic
categories
rather than
words:
phonologically
similar
"nouns" and
"adjectives"
did not
compete when a
combination of
syntactic and
visual
information
strongly
predicted form
class. These
results
suggest that
predictive
context is
integrated
continuously,
and that
previous
findings
supporting
delayed
context
integration
stem from weak
contexts
rather than
delayed
integration.Ja
mes Magnuson,
Michael
Tanenhaus,
Richard Aslin
Source: Cognition, Vol. 108, No. 3. (September 2008), pp. 866-873.
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