This volume in the Basic Research Series consists of the proceedings of the Symposium on Natural Language and Speech held during the ESPRIT Conference of November 1991 - a conference that serves to open up ESPRIT results not only to the ESPRIT community but also to the entire European IT industry and its users. The symposium is organised by the newly launched Network of Excellence on Language and Speech (3701) which brings together the foremost European experts and institutions in these two domains. By bringing together these two communities, which have so far been working in relative…mehr
This volume in the Basic Research Series consists of the proceedings of the Symposium on Natural Language and Speech held during the ESPRIT Conference of November 1991 - a conference that serves to open up ESPRIT results not only to the ESPRIT community but also to the entire European IT industry and its users. The symposium is organised by the newly launched Network of Excellence on Language and Speech (3701) which brings together the foremost European experts and institutions in these two domains. By bringing together these two communities, which have so far been working in relative isolation from each other, the network aims to augment the focusing of research onto the long-term goal of the "construction of an integrated model of the cognitive chain linking speech to reasoning via natural language". To advance towards this industrially significant goal, the network operates at different levels - a strategy for research, a coordination for the training of needed researchers anda coordination of the use of its resource and communication infrastructure for the most efficient interworking of the members of the community who are spread all over Europe. This symposium is a small but significant building block for the achievement of the goals of the network.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Ewan Klein is Professor of Language Technology in the School of Informatics at the University of Edinburgh. He completed a PhD on formal semantics at the University of Cambridge in 1978. After some years working at the Universities of Sussex and Newcastle upon Tyne, Ewan took up a teaching position at Edinburgh. He was involved in the establishment of Edinburgh's Language Technology Group 1993, and has been closely associated with it ever since. From 2000-2002, he took leave from the University to act as Research Manager for the Edinburgh-based Natural Language Research Group of Edify Corporation, Santa Clara, and was responsible for spoken dialogue processing. Ewan is a past President of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics and was a founding member and Coordinator of the European Network of Excellence in Human Language Technologies (ELSNET). He has been involved in leading numerous academic-industrial collaborative projects, the most recent of wh
ich is a biological text mining initiative funded by ITI Life Sciences, Scotland, in collaboration with Cognia Corporation, NY.
Inhaltsangabe
The Trend Towards Statistical Models in Natural Language Processing.- Phonological Data Types.- Surface Structure, Intonation, and "Focus".- Lexical Issues in Natural Language Processing.- Linguistic Theory and Natural Language Processing.- Parametric Variation.- Approaches to Realisation in Natural Language Generation.- Deductive Interpretation.- On the Representation and Transmission of Information.- Natural Language: From Knowledge to Cognition.- Position papers for the panel session: Spoken Language Systems: Technological Goals and Integration Issues.- 1. Overview.- 2. Steps Towards Accurate Speech-to-Speech Translation.- 3. Future Directions of Speech Recognition Research.- 4. Speech-to-Speech Translation.- 5. The Role of Linguistic Data in Speech Technology.- 6. Text-to-Speech Research: Technological Goals and Integration Issues.- 7. System Architectures as the Key Issues for Speech Understanding.- Curricula Vitae.
The Trend Towards Statistical Models in Natural Language Processing.- Phonological Data Types.- Surface Structure, Intonation, and "Focus".- Lexical Issues in Natural Language Processing.- Linguistic Theory and Natural Language Processing.- Parametric Variation.- Approaches to Realisation in Natural Language Generation.- Deductive Interpretation.- On the Representation and Transmission of Information.- Natural Language: From Knowledge to Cognition.- Position papers for the panel session: Spoken Language Systems: Technological Goals and Integration Issues.- 1. Overview.- 2. Steps Towards Accurate Speech-to-Speech Translation.- 3. Future Directions of Speech Recognition Research.- 4. Speech-to-Speech Translation.- 5. The Role of Linguistic Data in Speech Technology.- 6. Text-to-Speech Research: Technological Goals and Integration Issues.- 7. System Architectures as the Key Issues for Speech Understanding.- Curricula Vitae.
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