| Kim Binsted, Helen Pain, and Graeme Ritchie. Children's evaluation of computer-generated punning riddles. Pragmatics and Cognition, 5(2):309--358, 1997. |
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Kim Binsted, Helen Pain, and Graeme Ritchie. Children's evaluation of computer-generated punning riddles. Pragmatics and Cognition, 5(2):309--358, 1997.
No context found.
Kim Binsted, Helen Pain, and Graeme Ritchie. Children 's evaluation of computer-generated punning riddles. Pragmatics and Cognition, 5(2):309--358, 1997.
....do you call a quirky quantifier An odd number. What s the difference between money and and a bottom One you spare and bank, the other you bare and spank. What do you get when you cross a monkey and a peach An ape ricot. When these jokes were tested by showing them to schoolchildren [6], the better ones were judged to be jokes, to be as funny as some of the jokes found in human written joke books of a similar genre, and certainly to be very different from various non jokes included for control purposes. 2 The examples here used the WordNet program [36] While this performance ....
Kim Binsted, Helen Pain, and Graeme Ritchie. Children's evaluation of computer-generated punning riddles. Pragmatics and Cognition, 5(2):309-- 358, 1997.
No context found.
Kim Binsted, Helen Pain, and Graeme Ritchie. Children's evaluation of computer-generated punning riddles. Pragmatics and Cognition, 5(2):309--358, 1997.
No context found.
Kim Binsted, Helen Pain, and Graeme Ritchie. Children's evaluation of computergenerated punning riddles. Pragmatics and Cognition, 5(2):309--358, 1997.
....claim that this can be used directly to describe various humorous forms, since something like Koestler s bisociation can be modelled by a form of matching con gurations of nodes in such a network. They do not indicate what has been implemented, and with what results. The JAPE riddle generator (Binsted and Ritchie, 1994, 1997) is a program which is capable of producing rather simple punning riddles of the sort enjoyed by young children. Although such jokes do have a natural decomposition into a set up and punchline , they do not seem to be related in quite the same way as in, for 6 example, a funny story (Section 2 ....
....What do you call a quirky quanti er An odd number. What s the di erence between money and and a bottom One you spare and bank, the other you bare and spank. What do you get when you cross a monkey and a peach An ape ricot. When these jokes were tested by showing them to schoolchildren (Binsted et al. 1997), the better ones were judged to be jokes, to be as funny as some of the jokes found in human written joke books of a similar genre, and certainly to be very di erent from various non jokes included for control purposes. While this performance is impressive in many ways, it has certain weaknesses ....
Binsted, K., Pain, H., and Ritchie, G. (1997). Children's evaluation of computergenerated punning riddles. Pragmatics and Cognition, 5(2), 309-358.
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