Computational Models of Language Meaning in Context (Dagstuhl Seminar 13462)

Authors Hans Kamp, Alessandro Lenci, James Pustejovsky and all authors of the abstracts in this report



PDF
Thumbnail PDF

File

DagRep.3.11.79.pdf
  • Filesize: 0.8 MB
  • 38 pages

Document Identifiers

Author Details

Hans Kamp
Alessandro Lenci
James Pustejovsky
and all authors of the abstracts in this report

Cite AsGet BibTex

Hans Kamp, Alessandro Lenci, and James Pustejovsky. Computational Models of Language Meaning in Context (Dagstuhl Seminar 13462). In Dagstuhl Reports, Volume 3, Issue 11, pp. 79-116, Schloss Dagstuhl – Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik (2014)
https://doi.org/10.4230/DagRep.3.11.79

Abstract

This report documents the program and the outcomes of Dagstuhl Seminar 13462 "Computational Models of Language Meaning in Context". The seminar addresses one of the most significant issues to arise in contemporary formal and computational models of language and inference: that of the role and expressiveness of distributional models of semantics and statistically derived models of language and linguistic behavior. The availability of very large corpora has brought about a near revolution in computational linguistics and language modeling, including machine translation, information extraction, and question-answering. Several new models of language meaning are emerging that provide potential formal interpretations of linguistic patterns emerging from these distributional datasets. But whether such systems can provide avenues for formal and robust inference and reasoning is very much still uncertain. This seminar examines the relationship between classical models of language meaning and distributional models, and the role of corpora, annotations, and the distributional models derived over these data. To our knowledge, there have been no recent Dagstuhl Seminars on this or related topics.
Keywords
  • formal semantics
  • distributional semantics
  • polysemy
  • inference
  • compositionality
  • Natural Language Processing
  • meaning in context

Metrics

  • Access Statistics
  • Total Accesses (updated on a weekly basis)
    0
    PDF Downloads
Questions / Remarks / Feedback
X

Feedback for Dagstuhl Publishing


Thanks for your feedback!

Feedback submitted

Could not send message

Please try again later or send an E-mail