DE eng

Search in the Catalogues and Directories

Page: 1 2 3
Hits 1 – 20 of 45

1
On the Relationships Between the Grammatical Genders of Inanimate Nouns and Their Co-Occurring Adjectives and Verbs ...
BASE
Show details
2
Investigating Cross-Linguistic Adjective Ordering Tendencies with a Latent-Variable Model ...
BASE
Show details
3
SIGMORPHON 2020 Shared Task 0: Typologically Diverse Morphological Inflection ...
BASE
Show details
4
Intrinsic Probing through Dimension Selection ...
BASE
Show details
5
SIGTYP 2020 Shared Task: Prediction of Typological Features ...
BASE
Show details
6
The Paradigm Discovery Problem ...
Erdmann, Alexander; Elsner, Micha; Wu, Shijie. - : ETH Zurich, 2020
BASE
Show details
7
Information-Theoretic Probing for Linguistic Structure ...
BASE
Show details
8
It’s Easier to Translate out of English than into it: Measuring Neural Translation Difficulty by Cross-Mutual Information ...
BASE
Show details
9
Information-Theoretic Probing for Linguistic Structure ...
BASE
Show details
10
Intrinsic Probing through Dimension Selection ...
BASE
Show details
11
Generalized Entropy Regularization or: There’s Nothing Special about Label Smoothing ...
BASE
Show details
12
A Corpus for Large-Scale Phonetic Typology ...
BASE
Show details
13
Phonotactic Complexity and its Trade-offs ...
BASE
Show details
14
Phonotactic Complexity and Its Trade-offs ...
Pimentel, Tiago; Roark, Brian; Cotterell, Ryan. - : ETH Zurich, 2020
BASE
Show details
15
A Corpus for Large-Scale Phonetic Typology ...
BASE
Show details
16
Investigating Cross-Linguistic Adjective Ordering Tendencies with a Latent-Variable Model ...
Leung, Jun Yen; Emerson, Guy; Cotterell, Ryan. - : ETH Zurich, 2020
BASE
Show details
17
Morphologically Aware Word-Level Translation ...
BASE
Show details
18
Predicting Declension Class from Form and Meaning ...
Abstract: The noun lexica of many natural languages are divided into several declension classes with characteristic morphological properties. Class membership is far from deterministic, but the phonological form of a noun and/or its meaning can often provide imperfect clues. Here, we investigate the strength of those clues. More specifically, we operationalize this by measuring how much information, in bits, we can glean about declension class from knowing the form and/or meaning of nouns. We know that form and meaning are often also indicative of grammatical gender---which, as we quantitatively verify, can itself share information with declension class---so we also control for gender. We find for two Indo-European languages (Czech and German) that form and meaning respectively share significant amounts of information with class (and contribute additional information above and beyond gender). The three-way interaction between class, form, and meaning (given gender) is also significant. Our study is important for two ... : 14 pages, 2 figures, the is the camera-ready version accepted at the 2020 Annual Conference of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL 2020) ...
Keyword: Computation and Language cs.CL; FOS Computer and information sciences
URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/2005.00626
https://dx.doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2005.00626
BASE
Hide details
19
Predicting declension class from form and meaning
BASE
Show details
20
Please Mind the Root: Decoding Arborescences for Dependency Parsing
In: Proceedings of the 2020 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing (EMNLP) (2020)
BASE
Show details

Page: 1 2 3

Catalogues
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Bibliographies
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Linked Open Data catalogues
0
Online resources
0
0
0
0
Open access documents
45
0
0
0
0
© 2013 - 2024 Lin|gu|is|tik | Imprint | Privacy Policy | Datenschutzeinstellungen ändern