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Natural Language Communication with Pictorial Information Systems

Posted By: AvaxGenius
Natural Language Communication with Pictorial Information Systems

Natural Language Communication with Pictorial Information Systems by Leonard Bolc
English | PDF | 1984 | 334 Pages | ISBN : 3642822878 | 31.1 MB

This book contains the reports of selected projects involving natural language commu­ nication with pictorial information systems. More than just a record of research results, however, it presents concrete applications to the solution of a wide variety of problems. The authors are all prominent figures in the field whose authoritative contributions help ensure its continued expansion in both size and significance. Y. C. Lee and K S. Fu (Purdue University, USA) survey picture query languages which form an interface between the pictorial database system and the user and support infor­ mation retrieval, data entry and manipulation, data analysis and output generation. They include explicit picture query languages that augment alphanumeric data query langua­ ges as well as languages and command sets which are implicitly embedded in a pictorial information system but perform similar functions. It is worth mentioning that some forms of query languages can be transformed from a given set of natural language senten­ ces by using ATN (Augmented Transition Networks), which consequently allows for na­ turallanguage communication with information system.

A Computational Model of Natural Language Communication: Interpretation, Inference, and Production in Database Semantics

Posted By: AvaxGenius
A Computational Model of Natural Language Communication: Interpretation, Inference, and Production in Database Semantics

A Computational Model of Natural Language Communication: Interpretation, Inference, and Production in Database Semantics by Roland Hausser
English | PDF(True) | 2006 | 365 Pages | ISBN : 354035476X | 2.6 MB

Everyday life would be easier if we could simply talk with machines instead of having to program them. Before such talking robots can be built, however, there must be a theory of how communicating with natural language works. This requires not only a grammatical analysis of the language signs, but also a model of the cognitive agent, with interfaces for recognition and action, an internal database, and an algorithm for reading content in and out. In Database Semantics, these ingredients are used for reconstructing natural language communication as a mechanism for transferring content from the database of the speaker to the database of the hearer.