A principle-based system for natural language analysis and translation

Traditional views of grammatical theory hold that languages are characterised by sets of constructions. This approach entails the enumeration of all possible constructions for each language being described. Current theories of transformational generative grammar have established an alternative posit...

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Main Author: Crocker, Matthew Walter
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/27863
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-278632018-01-05T17:44:20Z A principle-based system for natural language analysis and translation Crocker, Matthew Walter Artificial intelligence -- Computer programs Machine translating Government-binding theory (Linguistics) Natural language processing (Computer science) Traditional views of grammatical theory hold that languages are characterised by sets of constructions. This approach entails the enumeration of all possible constructions for each language being described. Current theories of transformational generative grammar have established an alternative position. Specifically, Chomsky's Government-Binding theory proposes a system of principles which are common to human language. Such a theory is referred to as a "Universal Grammar"(UG). Associated with the principles of grammar are parameters of variation which account for the diversity of human languages. The grammar for a particular language is known as a "Core Grammar", and is characterised by an appropriately parametrised instance of UG. Despite these advances in linguistic theory, construction-based approaches have remained the status quo within the field of natural language processing. This thesis investigates the possibility of developing a principle-based system which reflects the modular nature of the linguistic theory. That is, rather than stipulating the possible constructions of a language, a system is developed which uses the principles of grammar and language specific parameters to parse language. Specifically, a system-is presented which performs syntactic analysis and translation for a subset of English and German. The cross-linguistic nature of the theory is reflected by the system which can be considered a procedural model of UG. Science, Faculty of Computer Science, Department of Graduate 2010-08-28T17:01:20Z 2010-08-28T17:01:20Z 1988 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/27863 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Artificial intelligence -- Computer programs
Machine translating
Government-binding theory (Linguistics)
Natural language processing (Computer science)
spellingShingle Artificial intelligence -- Computer programs
Machine translating
Government-binding theory (Linguistics)
Natural language processing (Computer science)
Crocker, Matthew Walter
A principle-based system for natural language analysis and translation
description Traditional views of grammatical theory hold that languages are characterised by sets of constructions. This approach entails the enumeration of all possible constructions for each language being described. Current theories of transformational generative grammar have established an alternative position. Specifically, Chomsky's Government-Binding theory proposes a system of principles which are common to human language. Such a theory is referred to as a "Universal Grammar"(UG). Associated with the principles of grammar are parameters of variation which account for the diversity of human languages. The grammar for a particular language is known as a "Core Grammar", and is characterised by an appropriately parametrised instance of UG. Despite these advances in linguistic theory, construction-based approaches have remained the status quo within the field of natural language processing. This thesis investigates the possibility of developing a principle-based system which reflects the modular nature of the linguistic theory. That is, rather than stipulating the possible constructions of a language, a system is developed which uses the principles of grammar and language specific parameters to parse language. Specifically, a system-is presented which performs syntactic analysis and translation for a subset of English and German. The cross-linguistic nature of the theory is reflected by the system which can be considered a procedural model of UG. === Science, Faculty of === Computer Science, Department of === Graduate
author Crocker, Matthew Walter
author_facet Crocker, Matthew Walter
author_sort Crocker, Matthew Walter
title A principle-based system for natural language analysis and translation
title_short A principle-based system for natural language analysis and translation
title_full A principle-based system for natural language analysis and translation
title_fullStr A principle-based system for natural language analysis and translation
title_full_unstemmed A principle-based system for natural language analysis and translation
title_sort principle-based system for natural language analysis and translation
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/27863
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