Computational Consequences of Agreement and Ambiguity in Natural Language


Autoria(s): Ristad, Eric Sven; Berwick, Robert C.
Data(s)

04/10/2004

04/10/2004

01/11/1988

Resumo

The computer science technique of computational complexity analysis can provide powerful insights into the algorithm-neutral analysis of information processing tasks. Here we show that a simple, theory-neutral linguistic model of syntactic agreement and ambiguity demonstrates that natural language parsing may be computationally intractable. Significantly, we show that it may be syntactic features rather than rules that can cause this difficulty. Informally, human languages and the computationally intractable Satisfiability (SAT) problem share two costly computional mechanisms: both enforce agreement among symbols across unbounded distances (Subject-Verb agreement) and both allow ambiguity (is a word a Noun or a Verb?).

Formato

2889628 bytes

1140647 bytes

application/postscript

application/pdf

Identificador

AIM-1178

http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/6526

Idioma(s)

en_US

Relação

AIM-1178