Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q3750433> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 61 of
61
with 100 triples per page.
- Q3750433 subject Q8498031.
- Q3750433 abstract "Constraint Grammar (CG) is a methodological paradigm for natural language processing (NLP). Linguist-written, context dependent rules are compiled into a grammar that assigns grammatical tags ("readings") to words or other tokens in running text. Typical tags address lemmatisation (lexeme or base form), inflexion, derivation, syntactic function, dependency, valency, case roles, semantic type etc. Each rule either adds, removes, selects or replaces a tag or a set of grammatical tags in a given sentence context. Context conditions can be linked to any tag or tag set of any word anywhere in the sentence, either locally (defined distances) or globally (undefined distances). Context conditions in the same rule may be linked, i.e. conditioned upon each other, negated, or blocked by interfering words or tags. Typical CGs consist of thousands of rules, that are applied set-wise in progressive steps, covering ever more advanced levels of analysis. Within each level, safe rules are used before heuristic rules, and no rule is allowed to remove the last reading of a given kind, thus providing a high degree of robustness.The Constraint Grammar concept was launched by Fred Karlsson in 1990 (Karlsson 1990; Karlsson et al., eds, 1995), and CG taggers and parsers have since been written for a large variety of languages, routinely achieving accuracy F-scores for part of speech (word class) of over 99%. A number of syntactic CG systems have reported F-scores of around 95% for syntactic function labels. CG systems can be used to create full syntactic trees in other formalisms by adding small, non-terminal based phrase structure grammars or dependency grammars, and a number of Treebank projects have used Constraint Grammar for automatic annotation. CG methodology has also been used in a number of language technology applications, such as spell checkers and machine translation systems.".
- Q3750433 wikiPageExternalLink it.
- Q3750433 wikiPageExternalLink cg3.html.
- Q3750433 wikiPageExternalLink constraint_grammar.html.
- Q3750433 wikiPageExternalLink constraint_grammar.html.
- Q3750433 wikiPageExternalLink muurisep99determination.html.
- Q3750433 wikiPageExternalLink test.html.
- Q3750433 wikiPageExternalLink 974358.974370.
- Q3750433 wikiPageExternalLink english.html.
- Q3750433 wikiPageExternalLink constraint-grammar-tutorial.
- Q3750433 wikiPageExternalLink demo.pl.
- Q3750433 wikiPageExternalLink MGnag.html.
- Q3750433 wikiPageExternalLink vislcg.
- Q3750433 wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Q3750433 wikiPageExternalLink CG.
- Q3750433 wikiPageExternalLink docu-sme-manual.html.
- Q3750433 wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Q3750433 wikiPageExternalLink engcg.
- Q3750433 wikiPageExternalLink intro.
- Q3750433 wikiPageExternalLink The-Oslo-Bergen-Tagger.
- Q3750433 wikiPageExternalLink fin-dis.cg1.
- Q3750433 wikiPageExternalLink fin-dis.rle.
- Q3750433 wikiPageExternalLink irish.htm.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q111029.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q111352.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q1134367.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q12107.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q132874.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q1412.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q1412952.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q164274.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q184835.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q207857.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q2166335.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q2302023.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q25258.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q25355.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q2554325.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q279724.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q30642.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q33947.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q36126.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q39645.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q437719.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q5048358.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q56322.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q674834.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q728001.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q79798.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q811525.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q82042.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q823839.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q8498031.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q8819.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q9043.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q9072.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q9142.
- Q3750433 wikiPageWikiLink Q9309.
- Q3750433 comment "Constraint Grammar (CG) is a methodological paradigm for natural language processing (NLP). Linguist-written, context dependent rules are compiled into a grammar that assigns grammatical tags ("readings") to words or other tokens in running text. Typical tags address lemmatisation (lexeme or base form), inflexion, derivation, syntactic function, dependency, valency, case roles, semantic type etc.".
- Q3750433 label "Constraint Grammar".