Resources
Related Categories
|
|
|
The Oxford Handbook of Computational Linguistics
Edited by Ruslan Mitkov
804 pages
|
numerous figures
|
246x171mm
978-0-19-823882-9
|
Hardback
|
23 January 2003
|
|
This item is printed to order. Items which are printed to order are normally despatched and charged within 5-10 days.
|
|
|
- Describes major concepts, processes, methods, and applications in computational linguistics
- An excellent point of reference for recent developments in this increasingly important discipline
- Brings together a team of renowned international contributors including M. Kay, R. Kaplan, G. Leech, Y. Wilks, L. Karttunen, R. Kittredge, A. Joshi, H. Somers, R. Grishman, and E. Hovy
Thirty-eight chapters, commissioned from experts all over the world, describe major concepts, methods, and applications in computational linguistics. Part I, Linguistic Fundamentals, provides an overview of the field suitable for senior undergraduates and non-specialists from other fields of linguistics and related disciplines. Part II describes current tasks, techniques, and tools in Natural Language Processing and aims to meet the needs of post-doctoral workers and others embarking on computational language research. Part III surveys
current Applications.
The book is a state-of-the-art reference to the one of the most active and productive fields in linguistics. It will be of interest and practical use to a wide range of linguists, as well as to researchers in such fields as informatics, artificial intelligence, language engineering, and cognitive science.
Readership: Academics and graduate students of linguistics and related disciplines; researchers in such fields as informatics, artificial intelligence, language engineering, and cognitive science
|
|
|
Edited by Ruslan Mitkov, University of Wolverhampton Contributors: Elisabeth André (DFKI, Saarbruecken, Germany) Ion Androutsopoulos (Software and Knowledge Engineering Lab, Athens) Maria Aretoulaki (INTERVOICE, Manchester) John Bateman (University of Bremen, Germany) Steven Bird (University of Pennsylvania) Didier Bourigault (Université de Toulouse II, France) Bob Carpenter (Lucent Technologies Bell Labs, New Jersey) John Carroll (University of Sussex) Thierry Dutoit (Faculté Polytechnique de Mons, Belgium) Jean-Luc Gauvain (LIMSI-CNRS,
Orsay, France) Gregory Grefenstette (Xerox Research Centre Europe, Meylan, France) Ralph Grishman (New York University) Patrick Hanks (Oxford University Press) Sanda Harabagiu (University of Texas) Marti A. Hearst (School of Information Management and Systems, Berkeley) L. Hirschman (Mitre Corporation, Bedford, USA) Eduard Hovy (University of Southern California) John Hutchins (University of East Anglia) Christian Jacquemin (LIMSI-CNRS, Orsay, France) Aravind K. Joshi (University of Pennsylvania) Ronald M. Kaplan (Xerox Corporation, Palo Alto, California) Martin Kay (Stanford University) Lauri Karttunen (Xerox Research Centre Europe, Meylan,
France) Richard I. Kittredge (Université de Montréal) Judith L. Klavans (Columbia University, USA) Lori Lamel (LIMSI-CNRS, Orsay, France) Shalom Lappin (Kings College, London) Geoffrey Leech (Lancaster University) Tony McEnery (Lancaster University) I. Mani (the Mitre Corporation, Virginia) Carlos Martín-Vide (Rovira i Virgili University, Spain) Yuji Matsumoto (Nara Institute of Science and Technology, Japan) Andrei Mikheev (University of Edinburgh) Ruslan Mitkov (University Of Wolverhampton) Dan Moldovan (University of Texas) Raymond J. Mooney (University of Texas) John Nerbonne (Rijksuniversiteit, Groningen, The
Netherlands) Allan Ramsay (UMIST) Christer Samuelsson (Xerox Research Centre Europe, Meylan, France) Frédérique Segond (Xerox Research Centre Europe, Meylan, France) Harold Somers (UMIST) Mark Stevenson (University of Sheffield) Tomek Strzalkowski (University of Albany, USA) Yannis Stylianou (AT&T Labs, New Jersey) Harald Trost (Austrian Research Institute for AI, Vienna) Evelyne Tzoukermann (Bell Laboratories, New Jersey) Piek Vossen (University of Amsterdam) Atro Voutilainen (University of Helsinki) Martin Weisser (Lancaster University) Yorick Wilks (University of Sheffield) Michael Zock (LIMSI-CNRS, Orsay, France)
|
|
|
"A highly stimulating and impressive book which should be found in every library and every linguistics department. I strongly recommend it." - International Journal of Lexicography "An excellent reference book that provides a wealth of information and enables the experienced reader to enter quickly into new subject areas of CL [computational linguistics] and NLP [natural language processing]. . . . The particular strengths of the OHCL are the comprehensive computation-oriented discussion of the fundamental linguistic issues and the broad coverage of NLP methods and resources. It thus extensively accounts for the theoretical and methodological backgrounds of CL and NLP. . . . The publisher should consider issuing a moderately
priced student's edition to make the OHCL affordable to the wide audience it definitely deserves." - Linguist List
|
|
|
Part I: Fundamentals
1: Steven Bird: Phonology
2: Harald Trost: Morphology
3: Patrick Hanks: Computational Lexicography
4: Ronald M. Kaplan: Syntax
5: Shalom Lappin: Semantics
6: Allan Ramsay: Discourse
7: Geoffrey Leech and Martin Weisser: Pragmatics and Dialogue
8: Carlos Martín-Vide: Formal Grammars and Languages
9: Bob Carpenter: Complexity
Part II: Processes, Methods, and Resources
10: Andrei Mikheev: Text Segmentation
11: Atro Voutilainen: Part-of-Speech Tagging
12: John Carroll: Parsing
13: Mark Stevenson and Yorick Wilks: Word-Sense Disambiguation
14: Ruslan Mitkov: Anaphora Resolution
15: John Bateman and Michael Zock: Natural Language Generation
16: Lori Lamel and Jean-Luc Gauvain: Speech Recognition
17: Thierry Dutoit and Yannis Stylianou: Text-to-Speech Synthesis
18: Lauri Karttunen: Finite-State Technology
19: Christer Samuelsson: Statistical Methods
20: Raymond J. Mooney: Machine Learning
21: Yuji Matsumoto: Lexical Knowledge Acquisition
22: L. Hirschman and I. Mani: Evaluation
23: Richard I. Kittredge: Sublanguages and Controlled Languages
24: Tony McEnery: Corpora
25: Piek Vossen: Ontologies
26: Aravind K. Joshi: Tree-Adjoining Grammars
Part III: Applications
27: John Hutchins: Machine Translation: General Overview
28: Harold Somers: Machine Translation: Latest Developments
29: Evelyne Tzoukermann, Judith L. Klavans and Tomek Strzalkowski: Information Retrieval
30: Ralph Grishman: Information Extraction
31: Sanda Harabagiu and Dan Moldovan: Question Answering
32: Eduard Hovy: Text Summarization
33: Christian Jacquemin and Didier Bourigault: Term Extraction and Automatic Indexing
34: Marti A. Hearst: Text Data Mining
35: Ion Androutsopoulos and Maria Aretoulaki: Natural Language Interaction
36: Elisabeth André: Natural Language in Multimodal and Multimedia Systems
37: John Nerbonne: Natural Language Processing in Computer-Aided Language Learning
38: Gregory Grefenstette and Frédérique Segond: Multilingual On-Line Natural Language Processing
|
|
|
|
 |
|
|
|
|
The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
|
|