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Sanskrit Computational Linguistics: 4th International Symposium, New Delhi, India, December 10-12, 2010. Proceedings 2010 ed. [Minkštas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 259 pages, weight: 422 g, 93 Illustrations, black and white; XII, 259 p. 93 illus., 1 Paperback / softback
  • Serija: Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence 6465
  • Išleidimo metai: 22-Nov-2010
  • Leidėjas: Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. K
  • ISBN-10: 3642175279
  • ISBN-13: 9783642175275
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 259 pages, weight: 422 g, 93 Illustrations, black and white; XII, 259 p. 93 illus., 1 Paperback / softback
  • Serija: Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence 6465
  • Išleidimo metai: 22-Nov-2010
  • Leidėjas: Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. K
  • ISBN-10: 3642175279
  • ISBN-13: 9783642175275
th It is with great pleasure that I present the selected papers from the 4 Int- national Sanskrit Computational Linguistics Symposium (4i-SCLS) to you. The event is being hosted by the Jawaharlal Nehru University, the premier research UniversityofIndiaduring(December10-12,2010)attheSpecialCenterforS- skrit Studies. The ?rst symposium was organized at INRIA, France, by G' erard Huet in 2007, the second at Brown University, USA, by Peter Scharf in 2008, and the third was organized at the University of Hyderabad by Amba Kulkarni in January2009. The Sanskrit computational linguistics community is relatively young, and the foundation for this kind of formal meeting to exchange ideas between Sanskritists, linguists and computer scientists was given by Prof. Huet and Prof. Amba Kulkarni. My hearty thanks to both of them for bringing about this uni cation of scholars under one umbrella. The 4i-SCLS saw excellent response from the scholars. We received more than 31 papers, which were examined by our Program Committee members to shortlist 18 papers for publication presented in this volume. The papers can be categorized under the following broad areas: 1. Phonology and speech technology 2. Morphology and shallow parsing 3. Syntax, semantics and parsing 4. Lexical resources, annotation and search 5. Machine translation and ambiguity resolution 6. Computer simulation of Ast ~ adhyay ~ ~ ? . . Some of the notable misses were the speech corpora annotation, image p- cessingtechniques likeOCR,andalsothe paperswrittenin Sanskrit. E orts will be made to ensure wider participation by scholars in future events.
Rule Interaction. Blocking and Derivation in Panini
1(20)
Rama Nath Sharma
On the Generalizability of Panini's Pratyahara-Technique to Other Languages
21(18)
Wiebke Petersen
Silke Hamann
Building a Prototype Text to Speech for Sanskrit
39(9)
Baiju Mahananda
C.M.S. Raju
Ramalinga Reddy Patil
Narayana Jha
Shrinivasa Varakhedi
Prahallad Kishore
Rule-Blocking and Forward-Looking Conditions in the Computational Modelling of Paninian Derivation
48(9)
Peter M. Scharf
Sanskrit Compound Processor
57(13)
Anil Kumar
Vipul Mittal
Amba Kulkarni
Designing a Constraint Based Parser for Sanskrit
70(21)
Amba Kulkarni
Sheetal Pokar
Devanand Shukl
Generative Graph Grammar of Neo-Vaisesika Formal Ontology (NVFO)
91(15)
Rajesh Tavva
Navjyoti Singh
Headedness and Modification in Nyaya Morpho-Syntactic Analysis: Towards a Bracket-Parsing Model
106(18)
Malhar Kulkarni
Anuja Ajotikar
Tanuja Ajotikar
Dipesh Katira
Chinmay Dharurkar
Chaitali Dangarikar
Citation Matching in Sanskrit Corpora Using Local Alignment
124(13)
Abhinandan S. Prasad
Shrisha Rao
RDBMS Based Lexical Resource for Indian Heritage: The Case of Mahabharata
137(13)
Diwakar Mani
Evaluating Tagsets for Sanskrit
150(12)
Madhav Gopal
Diwakar Mishra
Devi Priyanka
Singh
Performance of a Lexical and POS Tagger for Sanskrit
162(11)
Oliver Hellwig
The Knowledge Structure in Amarakosa
173(17)
Sivaja S. Nair
Amba Kulkarni
Gloss in Sanskrit Wordnet
190(8)
Malhar Kulkurni
Irawati Kulkarni
Chaitali Dangarikar
Pushpak Bhattacharyya
Vibhakti Divergence between Sanskrit and Hindi
198(11)
Preeti Shukla
Devanand Shukl
Amba Kulkarni
Anaphora Resolution Algorithm for Sanskrit
209(9)
Pravin Pralayankar
Sobha Lalitha Devi
Linguistic Investigations into Ellipsis in Classical Sanskrit
218(13)
Brendan S. Gillon
Asiddhatva Principle in Computational Model of Astadhyayi
231(8)
Sridhar Subbanna
Shrinivasa Varakhedi
Modelling Astadhyayi: An Approach Based on the Methodology of Ancillary Disciplines (Vedanga)
239(20)
Anand Mishra
Author Index 259