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Inheritance, Defaults and the Lexicon

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ISBN-10: 0521028051

ISBN-13: 9780521028059

Edition: N/A

Authors: Ted Briscoe, Ann Copestake, Valeria de Paiva, Branimir Boguraev, Steven Bird

List price: $47.99
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Description:

Inheritance has been used in AI knowledge representation for many years. Until recently, however, it had not been much exploited in linguistic representation. This collection describes how the lexicon may be structured using inheritance. The papers are mostly formal in orientation, mainly concentrating on unification-based systems (which nowadays form the basis for most theoretically motivated work on NLP, and for current linguistic theories such as HPSG) and discuss syntax and morphology as well as lexical semantics. The formalization of default inheritance, in particular, is discussed in detail, and linked with the AI literature.
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Book details

List price: $47.99
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 11/2/2006
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 308
Size: 5.98" wide x 8.98" long x 0.75" tall
Weight: 1.034
Language: English

Ted Briscoe is Lecturer in the Computer Laboratory at the University of Cambridge. He has published around 50 research articles.

Steven Bird is Associate Professor in the Department of Computer Science and Software Engineering at the University of Melbourne, and Senior Research Associate in the Linguistic Data Consortium at the University of Pennsylvania. He completed a PhD on computational phonology at the University of Edinburgh in 1990, supervised by Ewan Klein. He later moved to Cameroon to conduct linguistic fieldwork on the Grassfields Bantu languages under the auspices of the Summer Institute of Linguistics. More recently, he spent several years as Associate Director of the Linguistic Data Consortium where he led an R&D team to create models and tools for large databases of annotated text. At Melbourne…    

Contributors
Introduction Ted Briscoe
Skeptical and credulous default unification with applications to templates and inheritance Bob Carpenter
Prioritised multiple inheritance in DATR
Some reflections on the conversion of the TIC lexicon into DATR
Norms or inference tickets? a frontal collision between intuitions
Issues in the design of a language for representing linguistic information based on inheritance and feature structures
Feature-based inheritance networks for computational lexicons
A practical approach to multiple default inheritance for unification-based lexicons
The ACQUILEX LKB: an introduction
Types and constraints in the LKB
LKB encoding of lexical knowledge
Defaults in lexical representation
Untangling definition structure into knowledge representation
Appendices
References
Indexes