State-of-the-art of Spoken Language Systems - a Survey (1992)
BibTeX
@MISC{(ed.)92state-of-the-artof,
author = {Lars Bo Larsen (ed.) and Stc Speech and Technology Centre and Lars Bo Larsen and Tom Brøndsted Stc and Hans Dybkjær Ccs and Laila Dybkjær Ccs and Claus Povlsen Cst and Lektor Paul Dalsgaard (projektleder and Aalborg Universitetscenter and Dk- København S},
title = {State-of-the-art of Spoken Language Systems - a Survey},
year = {1992}
}
OpenURL
Abstract
ion. Statements are true or false without geometrical or analogical similarity. 2. Inference. Propositional models are often used for the derivation of new statements by the use of inference rules. Often also the following two points will be characteristic for analogical representations: 1. Connection. Every item in a represented situation is found once with all its relations to other items. 2. Continuity. The representation is analogical with continuity in movement and time in the physical world. whereas propositional representations may be characterised by: 1. Dispersion. An item may be found in several statements. 2. Discreetness. Usually statements are not used for representing a continuous change. However, the two kinds of representation will not always differ in these latter points. Moreover, often it is possible to make a transformation from one representation to another without loss of information. Diagrams are used for an analogical representation in [Funt 1980]. Here...







