|
</term>
and the decision of how to combine them
|
into
|
one or more
<term>
sentences
</term>
. In this
|
#1329
Sentence planning is a set of inter-related but distinct tasks, one of which is sentence scoping, i.e. the choice of syntactic structure for elementary speech acts and the decision of how to combine them into one or more sentences. |
|
grammatical formalisms
</term>
can be translated
|
into
|
equivalent
<term>
RCGs
</term>
without increasing
|
#1644
In particular, range concatenation languages [RCL] can be parsed in polynomial time and many classical grammatical formalisms can be translated into equivalent RCGs without increasing their worst-case parsing time complexity. |
|
true text
</term>
through its transformation
|
into
|
the
<term>
noisy output
</term>
of an
<term>
|
#2703
In this paper, we introduce a generative probabilistic optical character recognition (OCR) model that describes an end-to-end process in the noisy channel framework, progressing from generation of true text through its transformation into the noisy output of an OCR system. |
|
create a
<term>
word-trie
</term>
, transform it
|
into
|
a
<term>
minimal DFA
</term>
, then identify
|
#3199
We create a word-trie, transform it into a minimal DFA, then identify hubs. |
|
task , and gives them translingual reach
|
into
|
other
<term>
languages
</term>
by leveraging
|
#3626
It gives users the ability to spend their time finding more data relevant to their task, and gives them translingual reach into other languages by leveraging human language technology. |
|
clusters
</term>
, offering us a good insight
|
into
|
the potential and limitations of
<term>
semantically
|
#3961
A novel evaluation scheme is proposed which accounts for the effect of polysemy on the clusters, offering us a good insight into the potential and limitations of semantically classifying undisambiguated SCF data. |
|
sequences
</term>
. We incorporate this analysis
|
into
|
a
<term>
diagnostic tool
</term>
intended for
|
#7648
We incorporate this analysis into a diagnostic tool intended for developers of machine translation systems, and demonstrate how our application can be used by developers to explore patterns in machine translation output. |
|
basics of
<term>
SMT
</term>
: Theory will be put
|
into
|
practice .
<term>
STTK
</term>
, a
<term>
statistical
|
#8117
Theory will be put into practice. |
|
</term>
which takes these
<term>
features
</term>
|
into
|
account . We introduce a new
<term>
method
|
#8756
The strength of our approach is that it allows a tree to be represented as an arbitrary set of features, without concerns about how these features interact or overlap and without the need to define a derivation or a generative model which takes these featuresinto account. |
|
take
<term>
contextual information
</term>
|
into
|
account . We evaluate our
<term>
paraphrase
|
#9748
We define a paraphrase probability that allows paraphrases extracted from a bilingual parallel corpus to be ranked using translation probabilities, and show how it can be refined to take contextual informationinto account. |
|
Our work aims at providing useful insights
|
into
|
the the
<term>
computational complexity
</term>
|
#9996
Our work aims at providing useful insights into the the computational complexity of those problems. |
|
integrating
<term>
automatic Q/A
</term>
applications
|
into
|
real-world environments .
<term>
FERRET
</term>
|
#11650
This paper describes FERRET, an interactive question-answering (Q/A) system designed to address the challenges of integrating automatic Q/A applications into real-world environments. |
|
<term>
general-purpose NLP components
</term>
|
into
|
a
<term>
machine translation pipeline
</term>
|
#11799
The LOGON MT demonstrator assembles independently valuable general-purpose NLP componentsinto a machine translation pipeline that capitalizes on output quality. |
|
translates
<term>
English questions
</term>
|
into
|
the
<term>
Prolog
</term><term>
subset of logic
|
#12902
With the aid of a logic-based grammar formalism called extraposition grammars, Chat-80 translates English questionsinto the Prolog subset of logic. |
|
scruffy texts
</term>
has been incorporated
|
into
|
a working
<term>
computer program
</term>
called
|
#13114
This method of using expectations to aid the understanding of scruffy texts has been incorporated into a working computer program called NOMAD, which understands scruffy texts in the domain of Navy messages. |
|
of transforming a
<term>
disposition
</term>
|
into
|
a
<term>
proposition
</term>
is referred to
|
#13591
The process of transforming a dispositioninto a proposition is referred to as explicitation or restoration. |
|
of segments of the
<term>
discourse
</term>
|
into
|
which the
<term>
utterances
</term>
naturally
|
#14165
The linguistic structure consists of segments of the discourseinto which the utterances naturally aggregate. |
|
the results of which will be incorporated
|
into
|
a
<term>
natural language generation system
|
#15233
This research is part of a larger study of anaphoric expressions, the results of which will be incorporated into a natural language generation system. |
|
different amounts and types of information
|
into
|
its
<term>
lexicon
</term>
according to its
|
#15934
Although every natural language system needs a computational lexicon, each system puts different amounts and types of information into its lexicon according to its individual needs. |
|
</term>
and the main
<term>
dictionary
</term>
fits
|
into
|
the standard
<term>
360K floppy
</term>
, whereas
|
#16831
The speed of the resulting program lies somewhere in the middle of the scale of existing spelling-checkers for English and the main dictionary fits into the standard 360K floppy, whereas the number of recognized word forms exceeds 6 million (for Czech). |