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El. knyga: Language Production, Cognition, and the Lexicon

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The book collects contributions from well-established researchers at the interface between language and cognition. It provides an overview of the latest insights into this interdisciplinary field from the perspectives of natural language processing, computer science, psycholinguistics and cognitive science.





One of the pioneers in cognitive natural language processing is Michael Zock, to whom this volume is dedicated. The structure of the book reflects his main research interests: lexicon and lexical analysis, semantics, language and speech generation, reading and writing technologies, language resources and language engineering.





The book is a valuable reference work and authoritative information source, giving an overview on the field and describing the state of the art as well as future developments. It is intended for researchers and advanced students interested in the subject.









One of the pioneers in cognitive natural language processing is Michael Zock, to whom this volume is dedicated. The structure of the book reflects his main research interests: Lexicon and lexical analysis, semantics, language and speech generation, reading and writing technologies, language resources and language engineering.





The book is a valuable reference work and authoritative information source, giving an overview on the field and describing the state of the art as well as future developments. It is intended for researchers and advanced students interested in the subject.





One of the pioneers in cognitive natural language processing is Michael Zock, to whom this volume is dedicated. The structure of the book reflects his main research interests: Lexicon and lexical analysis, semantics, language and speech generation, reading and writing technologies, language resources and language engineering.





The book is a valuable reference work and authoritative information source, giving an overview on the field and describing the state of the art as well as future developments. It is intended for researchers and advanced students interested in the subject.
Michael Zock: A Life of Interdisciplinary Research and International Engagement
1(12)
Mark T. Maybury
Part I Cognitive Natural Language Processing
What are Sentiment, Affect, and Emotion? Applying the Methodology of Michael Zock to Sentiment Analysis
13(12)
Eduard H. Hovy
Towards a Cognitive Natural Language Processing Perspective
25(12)
Bernadette Sharp
Cognitive Systems as Explanatory Artificial Intelligence
37(16)
Sergei Nirenburg
Part II Lexicon and Lexical Analysis
Lexical Contextualism: The Abelard Syndrome
53(22)
Alain Polguere
Predicative Lexical Units in Terminology
75(20)
Marie-Claude L'Homme
TOTAKI: A Help for Lexical Access on the TOT Problem
95(18)
Mathieu Lafourcade
Alain Joubert
Typing Relations in Distributional Thesauri
113(22)
Olivier Ferret
Multilingual Conceptual Access to Lexicon Based on Shared Orthography: An Ontology-Driven Study of Chinese and Japanese
135(16)
Chu-Ren Huang
Ya-Min Chou
Proportional Analogy in Written Language Data
151(24)
Yves Lepage
Multilingual Projections
175(28)
Pushpak Bhattacharyya
Part III Semantics
Personal Semantics
203(18)
Gregory Grefenstette
Comparisons of Relatedness Measures Through a Word Sense Disambiguation Task
221(24)
Didier Schwab
Andon Tchechmedjiev
Jerome Goulian
Gilles Serasset
How Can Metaphors Be Interpreted Cross-Linguistically?
245(12)
Yorick Wilks
Recursion and Ambiguity: A Linguistic and Computational Perspective
257(30)
Rodolfo Delmonte
Part IV Language and Speech Analysis and Generation
Consonants as Skeleton of Language: Statistical Evidences Through Text Production
287(12)
Kumiko Tanaka-Ishii
How Natural Are Artificial Languages?
299(14)
Rebecca Smaha
Christiane Fellbaum
Handling Defaults and Their Exceptions in Controlled Natural Language
313(18)
Rolf Schwitter
Ontology in Coq for a Guided Message Composition
331(16)
Line Jakubiec-Jamet
Bridging Gaps Between Planning and Open-Domain Spoken Dialogues
347(14)
Kristiina Jokinen
JSREAL: A Text Realizer for Web Programming
361(18)
Nicolas Daoust
Guy Lapalme
Part V Reading and Writing Technologies
Simple or Not Simple? A Readability Question
379(20)
Sanja Stajner
Ruslan Mitkov
Gloria Corpas Pastor
An Approach to Improve the Language Quality of Requirements
399(20)
Juyeon Kang
Patrick Saint-Dizier
Learning from Errors: Systematic Analysis of Complex Writing Errors for Improving Writing Technology
419(22)
Cerstin Mahlow
Part VI Language Resources and Language Engineering
Language Matrices and a Language Resource Impact Factor
441(32)
Joseph Mariani
Gil Francopoulo
The Fips Multilingual Parser
473(18)
Eric Wehrli
Luka Nerima
The Lexical Ontology for Romanian
491(14)
Dan Tufis
Verginica Barbu Mititelu
Quo Vadis: A Corpus of Entities and Relations
505(40)
Dan Cristea
Daniela Gifu
Mihaela Colhon
Paul Diac
Anca-Diana Bibiri
Catalina Maranduc
Liviu-Andrei Scutelnicu
AusTalk and Alveo: An Australian Corpus and Human Communication Science Collaboration Down Under
545(16)
Dominique Estival
Knowledge Services Innovation: When Language Engineering Marries Knowledge Engineering
561(22)
Asanee Kawtrakul
Index 583
Nśria Gala. PhD in computational linguistics at Paris Sud University. She worked as a research engineer at Xerox Research Center in Grenoble before being appointed as an Assistant Professor at Aix Marseille University (2004). She currently works with the natural language processing team at LIF (Computer Science Laboratory). Her main research interests on natural language processing focus on the lexicon, building lexical resources and automatic simplification.

Reinhard Rapp, PhD, Marie Curie Fellow at Aix-Marseille University. He previously worked at various institutions in Germany, Switzerland, Australia, Spain, Canada, and England. His research interests are in computational linguistics and cognitive science. His about 140 publications (among them 20 books and proceedings) deal with topics such as machine translation, dictionary extraction from parallel and comparable corpora, statistical language learning, text mining, word sense disambiguation, and thesaurus construction. He has been involved in 15 (mostly international) projects, regularly serves as a reviewer for journals and scientific meetings, and co-organized 14 international conferences, symposia and workshops.

Gemma Bel Enguix. PhD in linguistics at the Rovira i Virgili University (Tarragona). She has been a postdoctoral fellow at Georgetown (Washington, DC) and Milano-Bicocca, and has held a Ramon y Cajal research position in Tarragona. Currently, she is working as a Marie Curie Researcher at LIF at Aix-Marseille Université.