Lexicon development for speech and language processing

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Bibliographic Information

Lexicon development for speech and language processing

edited by Frank Van Eynde, and Dafydd Gibbon

(Text, speech, and language technology, v. 12)

Kluwer, c2000

Available at  / 26 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book offers a state-of-the-art survey of methods and techniques for structuring, acquiring and maintaining lexical resources for speech and language processing. The first chapter provides a broad survey of the field of computational lexicography, introducing most of the issues, terms and topics which are addressed in more detail in the rest of the book. The next two chapters focus on the structure and the content of man-made lexicons, concentrating respectively on (morpho-)syntactic and (morpho-)phonological information. Both chapters adopt a declarative constraint-based methodology and pay ample attention to the various ways in which lexical generalizations can be formalized and exploited to enhance the consistency and to reduce the redundancy of lexicons. A complementary perspective is offered in the next two chapters, which present techniques for automatically deriving lexical resources from text corpora. These chapters adopt an inductive data-oriented methodology and focus also on methods for tokenization, lemmatization and shallow parsing. The next three chapters focus on speech applications, more specifically on the organization of speech data bases, and on the use of lexica in speech synthesis and speech recognition. The last chapter takes a psycholinguistic perspective and addresses the relation between storage and computation in the mental lexicon. The relevance of these topics for speech and language processing is obvious, for since NLP systems need large lexica in order to achieve reasonable coverage, and since the construction and maintenance of large-size lexical resources is a complex and costly task, it is of crucial importance for those who design or build such systems to be aware of the latest developments in this fast-moving field. The intended audience for this book includes advanced students and professional scientists working in the areas of computational linguistics and language and speech technology.

Table of Contents

  • Preface. Computational Lexicography
  • D. Gibbon. Constraint-Based Lexica
  • G. Bouma, et al. Phonology-Based Lexical Knowledge Representation
  • L. Cahill, et al. Inductive Lexica
  • W. Daelemans, G. Durieux. Recognizing Lexical Patterns in Text
  • G. Grefenstette, et al. Speech Databases
  • C. Draxler. The Use of Lexica in Text-To-Speech Systems
  • S. Quazza, H. v.d. Heuvel. The Use of Lexica in Automatic Speech Recognition
  • M. Adda-Decker, L. Lamel. Morphology in the Mental Lexicon: A Computational Model for Visual Word Recognition
  • R.H. Baayen, et al. Author Information.

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Details

  • NCID
    BA47526106
  • ISBN
    • 079236368X
  • Country Code
    ne
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Dordrecht ; Boston
  • Pages/Volumes
    xi, 298 p.
  • Size
    25 cm
  • Parent Bibliography ID
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