| Sanders, A. F., R. H. Sanders, "Syntatic Parsing: A Survey," Computers and the Humanities, Volume 23, No. 1 (January 1989), Pages 13--30. 91 |
....A derivation in a CCG can be transformed into a way of drawing links among the words so that they do not cross: a link is drawn between the symbols cancelled by the combination operation. This connection breaks down under more careful scrutiny. In all of the examples of CCGs that we have seen [1, 4, 7, 11], the linkages that result from analyzing English sentences are very different from those coming from our system. For example, Joshi [7] shows a CCG capable of analyzing the sentence: Harry likes peanuts passionately. In our interpretation of that analysis, Harry ends up being linked to ....
Sanders, A. F., R. H. Sanders, "Syntatic Parsing: A Survey," Computers and the Humanities, Volume 23, No. 1 (January 1989), Pages 13--30. 91
....A derivation in a CCG can be transformed into a way of drawing links among the words so that they do not cross: a link is drawn between the symbols cancelled by the combination operation. This connection breaks down under more careful scrutiny. In all of the examples of CCGs that we have seen [1, 4, 7, 11], the linkages that result from analyzing English sentences are very different from those coming from our system. For example, Joshi [7] shows a CCG capable of analyzing the sentence: Harry likes peanuts passionately. In our interpretation of that analysis, Harry ends up being linked to ....
Sanders, A. F., R. H. Sanders, "Syntatic Parsing: A Survey," Computers and the Humanities, Volume 23, No. 1 (January 1989), Pages 13--30.
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