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Prosodic Morphology: constraint interaction and satisfaction

by John J. Mccarthy, Alan Prince , 1993
"... Permission is hereby granted by the authors to reproduce this document, in whole or in part, for personal use, for instruction, or for any other non-commercial purpose. Table of Contents Acknowledgments......................................................... ..."
Abstract - Cited by 420 (31 self) - Add to MetaCart
Permission is hereby granted by the authors to reproduce this document, in whole or in part, for personal use, for instruction, or for any other non-commercial purpose. Table of Contents Acknowledgments.........................................................

Inducing Features of Random Fields

by Stephen Della Pietra, Vincent Della Pietra, John Lafferty - IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON PATTERN ANALYSIS AND MACHINE INTELLIGENCE , 1997
"... We present a technique for constructing random fields from a set of training samples. The learning paradigm builds increasingly complex fields by allowing potential functions, or features, that are supported by increasingly large subgraphs. Each feature has a weight that is trained by minimizing the ..."
Abstract - Cited by 664 (14 self) - Add to MetaCart
the Kullback-Leibler divergence between the model and the empirical distribution of the training data. A greedy algorithm determines how features are incrementally added to the field and an iterative scaling algorithm is used to estimate the optimal values of the weights. The random field models and techniques

Understanding Normal and Impaired Word Reading: Computational Principles in Quasi-Regular Domains

by David C. Plaut , James L. McClelland, Mark S. Seidenberg, Karalyn Patterson - PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW , 1996
"... We develop a connectionist approach to processing in quasi-regular domains, as exemplified by English word reading. A consideration of the shortcomings of a previous implementation (Seidenberg & McClelland, 1989, Psych. Rev.) in reading nonwords leads to the development of orthographic and phono ..."
Abstract - Cited by 583 (94 self) - Add to MetaCart
and phonological representations that capture better the relevant structure among the written and spoken forms of words. In a number of simulation experiments, networks using the new representations learn to read both regular and exception words, including low-frequency exception words, and yet are still able

Strategies of Discourse Comprehension

by Teun A. Van Dijk, Walter Kintsch , 1983
"... El Salvador, Guatemala is a, study in black and white. On the left is a collection of extreme Marxist-Leninist groups led by what one diplomat calls “a pretty faceless bunch of people.’ ’ On the right is an entrenched elite that has dominated Central America’s most populous country since a CIA-backe ..."
Abstract - Cited by 601 (27 self) - Add to MetaCart
El Salvador, Guatemala is a, study in black and white. On the left is a collection of extreme Marxist-Leninist groups led by what one diplomat calls “a pretty faceless bunch of people.’ ’ On the right is an entrenched elite that has dominated Central America’s most populous country since a CIA-backed coup deposed the reformist government of Col. Jacobo Arbenz Guzmán in 1954. Moderates of the political center. embattled but alive in E1 Salvador, have virtually disappeared in Guatemala-joining more than 30.000 victims of terror over the last tifteen vears. “The situation in Guatemala is much more serious than in EI Salvador, ” declares one Latin American diplomat. “The oligarchy is that much more reactionary. and the choices are far fewer. “ ‘Zero’: The Guatemalan oligarchs hated Jimmy Carter for cutting off U.S. military aid in 1977 to protest human-rights abuses-and the right-wingers hired marimba bands and set off firecrackers on the night Ronald Reagan was elected. They considered Reagan an ideological kinsman and believed they had a special

WordNet: An on-line lexical database

by George A. Miller, Richard Beckwith, Christiane Fellbaum, Derek Gross, Katherine Miller - International Journal of Lexicography , 1990
"... WordNet is an on-line lexical reference system whose design is inspired by current ..."
Abstract - Cited by 1945 (9 self) - Add to MetaCart
WordNet is an on-line lexical reference system whose design is inspired by current

Verb Semantics And Lexical Selection

by Zhibiao Wu , 1994
"... ... structure. As Levin has addressed (Levin 1985), the decomposition of verbs is proposed for the purposes of accounting for systematic semantic-syntactic correspondences. This results in a series of problems for MT systems: inflexible verb sense definitions; difficulty in handling metaphor and new ..."
Abstract - Cited by 520 (4 self) - Add to MetaCart
... structure. As Levin has addressed (Levin 1985), the decomposition of verbs is proposed for the purposes of accounting for systematic semantic-syntactic correspondences. This results in a series of problems for MT systems: inflexible verb sense definitions; difficulty in handling metaphor and new usages; imprecise lexical selection and insufficient system coverage. It seems one approach is to apply probability methods and statistical models for some of these problems. However, the question reminds: has PSR exhausted the potential of the knowledge-based approach? If not, are there any alternatives that can improve the handling of these problems? We suggest an alternative that represents verb semantic knowledge and accounts for not only fine-tuned systematic semantic-syntactic correspondences, but also semantic-interpretation correspondences. A verb is not represented by a predicate or simple primitives, but by a set of semantic components that are sensitive to the syntactic altern

Being There -- Putting Brain, Body, and World Together Again

by Andy Clark , 1997
"... ..."
Abstract - Cited by 1067 (17 self) - Add to MetaCart
Abstract not found

The role of deliberate practice in the acquisition of expert performance

by K. Anders Ericsson, Ralf Th. Krampe, Clemens Tesch-romer - Psychological Review , 1993
"... The theoretical framework presented in this article explains expert performance as the end result of individuals ' prolonged efforts to improve performance while negotiating motivational and external constraints. In most domains of expertise, individuals begin in their childhood a regimen of ef ..."
Abstract - Cited by 633 (13 self) - Add to MetaCart
The theoretical framework presented in this article explains expert performance as the end result of individuals ' prolonged efforts to improve performance while negotiating motivational and external constraints. In most domains of expertise, individuals begin in their childhood a regimen of effortful activities (deliberate practice) designed to optimize improvement. Individual differences, even among elite performers, are closely related to assessed amounts of deliberate practice. Many characteristics once believed to reflect innate talent are actually the result of intense practice extended for a minimum of 10 years. Analysis of expert performance provides unique evidence on the potential and limits of extreme environmental adaptation and learning. Our civilization has always recognized exceptional individuals, whose performance in sports, the arts, and science is vastly superior to that of the rest of the population. Speculations on the causes of these individuals ' extraordinary abilities and performance are as old as the first records of their achievements. Early accounts commonly attribute these individuals' outstanding performance to divine intervention, such as the

Earthquake Shakes Twitter Users: Real-time Event Detection by Social Sensors

by Takeshi Sakaki, Makoto Okazaki, Yutaka Matsuo - In Proceedings of the Nineteenth International WWW Conference (WWW2010). ACM , 2010
"... Twitter, a popular microblogging service, has received much attention recently. An important characteristic of Twitter is its real-time nature. For example, when an earthquake occurs, people make many Twitter posts (tweets) related to the earthquake, which enables detection of earthquake occurrence ..."
Abstract - Cited by 484 (3 self) - Add to MetaCart
, which are widely used for location estimation in ubiquitous/pervasive computing. The particle filter works better than other compared methods in estimating the centers of earthquakes and the trajectories of typhoons. As an application, we construct an earthquake reporting system in Japan. Because

Complete discrete 2-D Gabor transforms by neural networks for image analysis and compression

by John G. Daugman , 1988
"... Abstract-A three-layered neural network is described for transforming two-dimensional discrete signals into generalized nonorthogonal 2-D “Gabor ” representations for image analysis, segmentation, and compression. These transforms are conjoint spatiahpectral representations [lo], [15], which provide ..."
Abstract - Cited by 475 (8 self) - Add to MetaCart
Abstract-A three-layered neural network is described for transforming two-dimensional discrete signals into generalized nonorthogonal 2-D “Gabor ” representations for image analysis, segmentation, and compression. These transforms are conjoint spatiahpectral representations [lo], [15], which provide a complete image description in terms of locally windowed 2-D spectral coordinates embedded within global 2-D spatial coordinates. Because intrinsic redundancies within images are extracted, the resulting image codes can be very compact. However, these conjoint transforms are inherently difficult to compute because t e elementary expansion functions are not orthogonal. One orthogonking approach developed for 1-D signals by Bastiaans [SI, based on biorthonormal expansions, is restricted by constraints on the conjoint sampling rates and invariance of the windowing function, as well as by the fact that the auxiliary orthogonalizing functions are nonlocal infinite series. In the present “neural network ” approach, based
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