Complexity of Human Language Comprehension


Autoria(s): Ristad, Eric Sven
Data(s)

19/11/2004

19/11/2004

01/12/1988

Resumo

The goal of this article is to reveal the computational structure of modern principle-and-parameter (Chomskian) linguistic theories: what computational problems do these informal theories pose, and what is the underlying structure of those computations? To do this, I analyze the computational complexity of human language comprehension: what linguistic representation is assigned to a given sound? This problem is factored into smaller, interrelated (but independently statable) problems. For example, in order to understand a given sound, the listener must assign a phonetic form to the sound; determine the morphemes that compose the words in the sound; and calculate the linguistic antecedent of every pronoun in the utterance. I prove that these and other subproblems are all NP-hard, and that language comprehension is itself PSPACE-hard.

Formato

49 p.

5602405 bytes

2090110 bytes

application/postscript

application/pdf

Identificador

AIM-964

http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/7341

Idioma(s)

en_US

Relação

AIM-964

Palavras-Chave #linguistic theory #natural language #computational complexity #government-binding #phonology #syntax