other,37-2-P82-1035,bq |
special problems for readers , such as
<term>
|
misspelled words
|
</term>
,
<term>
missing words
</term>
,
<term>
|
#13011
However, a great deal of natural language texts e.g., memos, rough drafts, conversation transcripts etc., have features that differ significantly from neat texts, posing special problems for readers, such as misspelled words , missing words, poor syntactic construction, missing periods, etc. |
other,26-2-P82-1035,bq |
features that differ significantly from
<term>
|
neat texts
|
</term>
, posing special problems for readers
|
#13000
However, a great deal of natural language texts e.g., memos, rough drafts, conversation transcripts etc., have features that differ significantly from neat texts , posing special problems for readers, such as misspelled words, missing words, poor syntactic construction, missing periods, etc. |
other,11-4-P82-1035,bq |
expectations
</term>
can be used to figure out
<term>
|
unknown words
|
</term>
from
<term>
context
</term>
, constrain
|
#13066
These syntactic and semantic expectations can be used to figure out unknown words from context, constrain the possible word-senses of words with multiple meanings (ambiguity), fill in missing words (elllpsis), and resolve referents (anaphora). |
other,10-5-P82-1035,bq |
</term>
to aid the understanding of
<term>
|
scruffy texts
|
</term>
has been incorporated into a working
|
#13109
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. |
tech,2-1-P82-1035,bq |
to yield the answer . Most large
<term>
|
text-understanding systems
|
</term>
have been designed under the assumption
|
#12946
Most large text-understanding systems have been designed under the assumption that the input text will be in reasonably neat form, e.g., newspaper stories and other edited texts. |
other,25-5-P82-1035,bq |
<term>
NOMAD
</term>
, which understands
<term>
|
scruffy texts
|
</term>
in the domain of Navy messages .
|
#13124
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. |