Catálogo de publicaciones - libros
Computing Meaning
Harry Bunt ; Reinhard Muskens (eds.)
Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial
No disponible.
Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial
Computational Linguistics; Language Translation and Linguistics; Semantics; Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics)
Disponibilidad
Institución detectada | Año de publicación | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
---|---|---|---|---|
No detectada | 2007 | SpringerLink |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
libros
ISBN impreso
978-1-4020-5957-5
ISBN electrónico
978-1-4020-5958-2
Editor responsable
Springer Nature
País de edición
Reino Unido
Fecha de publicación
2007
Información sobre derechos de publicación
© Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2007
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
Computing The Semantic Information In An Utterance
Harry Bunt; Reinhard Muskens
When constructing multiagent systems, the designer may approach the system as a collection of individuals or may view the entire system as a whole. In addition to these approaches, it may be beneficial to consider the interactions between the individuals and the whole. Borrowing ideas from the notion of social construction and building on previous work in synthetic social construction, this paper presents a framework wherein autonomous agents engage in a dialectic relationship with the society of agents around them. In this framework, agents recognize patterns of social activity in their societies, group such patterns into institutions, and form computational representations of those institutions. The paper presents a design framework describing this method of institutionalization, some implementation suggestions, and a discussion of possible applications.
Pp. 1-10
Justified Sloppiness In Anaphoric Reference
Massimo Poesio; Uwe Reyle; Rosemary Stevenson
When constructing multiagent systems, the designer may approach the system as a collection of individuals or may view the entire system as a whole. In addition to these approaches, it may be beneficial to consider the interactions between the individuals and the whole. Borrowing ideas from the notion of social construction and building on previous work in synthetic social construction, this paper presents a framework wherein autonomous agents engage in a dialectic relationship with the society of agents around them. In this framework, agents recognize patterns of social activity in their societies, group such patterns into institutions, and form computational representations of those institutions. The paper presents a design framework describing this method of institutionalization, some implementation suggestions, and a discussion of possible applications.
Pp. 11-31
Deriving Quasi-Logical Forms From F-Structures For The Penn Treebank
Aoife Cahill; Mairead Mccarthy; Michael Burke; Josef Van Genabith; Andy Way
When constructing multiagent systems, the designer may approach the system as a collection of individuals or may view the entire system as a whole. In addition to these approaches, it may be beneficial to consider the interactions between the individuals and the whole. Borrowing ideas from the notion of social construction and building on previous work in synthetic social construction, this paper presents a framework wherein autonomous agents engage in a dialectic relationship with the society of agents around them. In this framework, agents recognize patterns of social activity in their societies, group such patterns into institutions, and form computational representations of those institutions. The paper presents a design framework describing this method of institutionalization, some implementation suggestions, and a discussion of possible applications.
Pp. 33-53
Semantic Underspecification: Which Technique For What Purpose?
Harry Bunt
When constructing multiagent systems, the designer may approach the system as a collection of individuals or may view the entire system as a whole. In addition to these approaches, it may be beneficial to consider the interactions between the individuals and the whole. Borrowing ideas from the notion of social construction and building on previous work in synthetic social construction, this paper presents a framework wherein autonomous agents engage in a dialectic relationship with the society of agents around them. In this framework, agents recognize patterns of social activity in their societies, group such patterns into institutions, and form computational representations of those institutions. The paper presents a design framework describing this method of institutionalization, some implementation suggestions, and a discussion of possible applications.
Pp. 55-85
Segmented Discourse Representation Theory: Dynamic Semantics With Discourse Structure
Alex Lascarides; Nicholas Asher
When constructing multiagent systems, the designer may approach the system as a collection of individuals or may view the entire system as a whole. In addition to these approaches, it may be beneficial to consider the interactions between the individuals and the whole. Borrowing ideas from the notion of social construction and building on previous work in synthetic social construction, this paper presents a framework wherein autonomous agents engage in a dialectic relationship with the society of agents around them. In this framework, agents recognize patterns of social activity in their societies, group such patterns into institutions, and form computational representations of those institutions. The paper presents a design framework describing this method of institutionalization, some implementation suggestions, and a discussion of possible applications.
Pp. 87-124
Shards: Fragment Resolution In Dialogue
Raquel Fernández; Jonathan Ginzburg; Howard Gregory; Shalom Lappin
When constructing multiagent systems, the designer may approach the system as a collection of individuals or may view the entire system as a whole. In addition to these approaches, it may be beneficial to consider the interactions between the individuals and the whole. Borrowing ideas from the notion of social construction and building on previous work in synthetic social construction, this paper presents a framework wherein autonomous agents engage in a dialectic relationship with the society of agents around them. In this framework, agents recognize patterns of social activity in their societies, group such patterns into institutions, and form computational representations of those institutions. The paper presents a design framework describing this method of institutionalization, some implementation suggestions, and a discussion of possible applications.
Pp. 125-144
Interpreting Concession Statements In Light Of Information Structure
Ivana Kruijff-Korbayová; Bonnie L. Webber
When constructing multiagent systems, the designer may approach the system as a collection of individuals or may view the entire system as a whole. In addition to these approaches, it may be beneficial to consider the interactions between the individuals and the whole. Borrowing ideas from the notion of social construction and building on previous work in synthetic social construction, this paper presents a framework wherein autonomous agents engage in a dialectic relationship with the society of agents around them. In this framework, agents recognize patterns of social activity in their societies, group such patterns into institutions, and form computational representations of those institutions. The paper presents a design framework describing this method of institutionalization, some implementation suggestions, and a discussion of possible applications.
Pp. 145-172
Context and The Composition Of Meaning
JAN VAN EIJCK
When constructing multiagent systems, the designer may approach the system as a collection of individuals or may view the entire system as a whole. In addition to these approaches, it may be beneficial to consider the interactions between the individuals and the whole. Borrowing ideas from the notion of social construction and building on previous work in synthetic social construction, this paper presents a framework wherein autonomous agents engage in a dialectic relationship with the society of agents around them. In this framework, agents recognize patterns of social activity in their societies, group such patterns into institutions, and form computational representations of those institutions. The paper presents a design framework describing this method of institutionalization, some implementation suggestions, and a discussion of possible applications.
Pp. 173-193
Meaning, Intonation And Negation
Marc Swerts; Emiel Krahmer
When constructing multiagent systems, the designer may approach the system as a collection of individuals or may view the entire system as a whole. In addition to these approaches, it may be beneficial to consider the interactions between the individuals and the whole. Borrowing ideas from the notion of social construction and building on previous work in synthetic social construction, this paper presents a framework wherein autonomous agents engage in a dialectic relationship with the society of agents around them. In this framework, agents recognize patterns of social activity in their societies, group such patterns into institutions, and form computational representations of those institutions. The paper presents a design framework describing this method of institutionalization, some implementation suggestions, and a discussion of possible applications.
Pp. 195-212
Customizing Meaning: Building Domain-Specific Semantic Representations From A Generic Lexicon
Myroslava Dzikovska; Mary Swift; James Allen
When constructing multiagent systems, the designer may approach the system as a collection of individuals or may view the entire system as a whole. In addition to these approaches, it may be beneficial to consider the interactions between the individuals and the whole. Borrowing ideas from the notion of social construction and building on previous work in synthetic social construction, this paper presents a framework wherein autonomous agents engage in a dialectic relationship with the society of agents around them. In this framework, agents recognize patterns of social activity in their societies, group such patterns into institutions, and form computational representations of those institutions. The paper presents a design framework describing this method of institutionalization, some implementation suggestions, and a discussion of possible applications.
Pp. 213-231