This collection takes the exciting step of examining natural language phenomena from the perspectives of both computational linguistics and formal semantics. Computational linguistics has until now been primarily concerned with the construction of computational models for handling the complexities of linguistic form, but has not tackled the questions of representing or computing meaning. Formal semantics, on the other hand, has attempted to account for the relations between forms and meanings, without necessarily attending to computational concerns. Computational Linguistics and Formal Semantics introduces the reader to the two disciplines and considers the prospects for the more unified and comprehensive computational theory of language that might obtain from their amalgamation.
Author(s): Michael Rosner, Roderick Johnson (eds.)
Series: Studies in Natural Language Processing
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Year: 1992
Language: English
Pages: 344
Cover
Summary
Title page
Contents
List of contributors
Preface
1 Unification
2 Representations and interpretations
3 Syntactic categories and semantic type
4 Fine-structure in categorial semantics
5 Properties, propositions and semantic theory
6 Algorithms for semantic interpretation
7 Situation schemata and linguistic representation
8 Application-oriented computational semantics
9 Form and content in semantics
10 Epilogue: on the relation between computational linguistics and formal semantics
Bibliography