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@ -1843,11 +1843,11 @@
@InProceedings{Lin2009,
author = {Lin, Cheng-Hung and Hsiao, Hsien-Sheng},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 19th ACM Great Lakes symposium on VLSI},
date = {2009},
title = {Hierarchical state machine architecture for regular expression pattern matching},
organization = {ACM},
date = {2009},
file = {Documents/reading/math/lin2009hierarchical.pdf},
keywords = {hsfm, compsci},
keywords = {hfsm, compsci},
}
@Thesis{Luo1990,
@ -1913,40 +1913,40 @@
@Article{Mohri1997,
author = {Mohri, Mehryar},
date = {1997},
journaltitle = {Computational Linguistics},
title = {Finite-state transducers in language and speech processing},
number = {2},
pages = {269--311},
volume = {23},
date = {1997},
file = {Documents/reading/math/mohri1997finite.pdf},
journaltitle = {Computational Linguistics},
keywords = {hsfm, compling},
keywords = {hsm, compling},
}
@InProceedings{Niemi2007,
author = {Niemi, Jyrki and Koskenniemi, Kimmo},
booktitle = {Nordic Conference on Computational Linguistics (NoDaLiDa) 2007 Conference Proceedings},
date = {2007},
title = {Representing Calendar Expressions with Finite-State Transducers that Bracket Periods of Time on a Hierarchical Timeline},
editor = {Nivre, Joakim and Kaalep, Heiki-Jann and Muischnek, Kadri and Koit, Mare},
pages = {355--362},
series = {Nordic Conference on Computational Linguistics (NoDaLiDa)},
date = {2007},
keywords = {hsfm, compsci},
keywords = {hsm, compsci},
}
@InProceedings{Reghizzi2011,
author = {Reghizzi, Stefano Crespi and {San Pietro}, Pierluigi},
booktitle = {8th International Conference of WORDS},
date = {2011},
title = {From regular to strictly local testable languages},
doi = {10.4204/EPTCS.63.14},
editor = {Ambrož, Petr, Holub, Štěpán and Masáková, Zuzana},
number = {63},
organization = {WORDS},
pages = {103--111},
series = {Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science (EPTCS)},
date = {2011},
doi = {10.4204/EPTCS.63.14},
file = {Documents/reading/math/reghizzi2011from.pdf},
keywords = {hsfm, compling},
keywords = {hfsm, compling},
}
@Book{Riehl2014,
@ -2307,14 +2307,14 @@
}
@Article{Blevins2006,
author = {Blevins, James P},
author = {Blevins, James P.},
date = {2006},
journaltitle = {Journal of Linguistics},
title = {Word-based morphology},
number = {3},
pages = {531--573},
volume = {42},
date = {2006},
file = {Documents/reading/morphology/blevins2006word.pdf},
journaltitle = {Journal of Linguistics},
keywords = {morphology},
}
@ -2826,12 +2826,12 @@
@Article{Gerken2005,
author = {Gerken, Louann and Wilson, Rachel and Lewis, William},
date = {2005},
journaltitle = {Journal of Child Language},
title = {Infants can use distributional cues to form syntactic categories},
pages = {249--268},
volume = {32},
date = {2005},
journaltitle = {Journal of Child Language},
keywords = {morphology},
keywords = {morphology, psycholing},
}
@Article{Goldsmith2001,
@ -4145,11 +4145,11 @@
@Thesis{Chandlee2014,
author = {Chandlee, Jane},
date = {2014},
file = {Documents/reading/phonology/chandlee2014strictly.pdf},
institution = {University of Delaware},
keywords = {hsfm, phonology},
title = {Strinctly Local Phonological Processes},
type = {PhD},
file = {Documents/reading/phonology/chandlee2014strictly.pdf},
keywords = {hfm, phonology},
}
@Book{Eisner2001,
@ -4179,13 +4179,13 @@
@Article{Jardine2016,
author = {Jardine, Adam and Heinz, Jeffrey},
date = {2016},
journaltitle = {Transactions of the Association for Computational Linguistics},
title = {Learning Tier-based Strictly 2-Local Languages},
pages = {87--98},
volume = {4},
date = {2016},
file = {Documents/reading/phonology/jardine2016learning.pdf},
journaltitle = {Transactions of the Association for Computational Linguistics},
keywords = {hsfm, phonology},
keywords = {hfsm, phonology},
}
@Article{Prince1983,
@ -4372,26 +4372,26 @@
@Article{Botvinick2004,
author = {Botvinick, Matthew and Plaut, David C},
date = {2004},
journaltitle = {Psychological Review},
title = {Doing Without Schema Hierarchies},
doi = {10.1037/0033-295X.111.2.395},
number = {2},
pages = {395--429},
volume = {111},
date = {2004},
doi = {10.1037/0033-295X.111.2.395},
journaltitle = {Psychological Review},
keywords = {psycholing, hsfm},
subtitle = {A Recurrent Connectionist Approach to Normal and Impaired Routine Sequential Action},
volume = {111},
keywords = {psycholing, hfm},
}
@Article{Braitenberg1997,
author = {Braitenberg, Valentino and Heck, Detlef and Sultan, Fahad},
date = {1997},
journaltitle = {Behavioral and Brain Sciences},
title = {The detection and generation of sequeunces as a key to cerebellar function: Experiments and theory},
pages = {229-277},
volume = {20},
date = {1997},
file = {Documents/reading/psycholinguistics/braitenberg1997detection.pdf},
journaltitle = {Behavioral and Brain Sciences},
keywords = {psycholing, hsfm},
keywords = {psycholing, hfsm},
}
@Book{Braitenberg2013,
@ -4452,13 +4452,13 @@
@Article{Cooper2006,
author = {Cooper, Richard P and Shallice, Tim},
date = {2006},
journaltitle = {Psychological Review},
title = {Hierarchical schemas and goals in the control of sequential behavior.},
number = {4},
pages = {887--916},
volume = {113},
date = {2006},
journaltitle = {Psychological Review},
keywords = {psycholing, hsfm},
keywords = {psycholing, sfm},
publisher = {American Psychological Association},
}
@ -4609,10 +4609,10 @@
@InCollection{Lashley1951,
author = {Lashley, Karl Spencer},
booktitle = {Cerebral mechanisms in behavior},
date = {1951},
title = {The problem of serial order in behavior},
pages = {112--136},
date = {1951},
keywords = {psycholing, hsfm},
keywords = {psycholing, hfsm},
}
@Article{Leonard2014,
@ -7685,14 +7685,14 @@
@InBook{Martin2012a,
author = {Martin, Scott and Pollard, Carl},
editor = {{de Groote}, P and Nederhof, MJ},
pages = {114--129},
title = {Hyperintensional dynamic semantics},
series = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science},
volume = {7395},
booktitle = {Formal Grammar 2011},
date = {2012},
title = {Hyperintensional dynamic semantics},
doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-32024-8_8},
editor = {{de Groote}, P and Nederhof, MJ},
pages = {114--129},
series = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science},
volume = {7395},
keywords = {semantics},
}
@ -8896,9 +8896,9 @@
author = {Fawcett, Alexia Zandra},
date = {2018},
institution = {University of California -- Santa Barbara},
keywords = {wao, ideophone},
title = {Ideophone Integration and Expressiveness in Wao Terero},
type = {Masters},
keywords = {wao, ideophones},
}
@Unpublished{Fiddler2011,
@ -9202,6 +9202,51 @@ mental state. These theories consequently predict that individual variation in t
keywords = {psycholing},
}
@Article{Nuckolls2014a,
author = {Nuckolls, Janis B. and Swanson, Tod D.},
date = {2014},
journaltitle = {Tipití: Journal of the Society for the Anthropology of Lowland South America},
title = {Earthy concreteness and anti-hypotheticalism in Amazonian Quichua discourse},
number = {1},
pages = {48--60},
volume = {12},
keywords = {quechua, anthroling},
}
@InProceedings{McCurdy2020,
author = {McCurdy, Kate and Goldwater, Sharon and Lopez, Adam},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 58th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics},
date = {2020},
title = {Inflecting when there's no majority},
doi = {10.18653/v1/2020.acl-main.159},
pages = {1745--1756},
subtitle = {Limitations of encode-decoder neural networks as cognitive models of German plurals},
abstract = {Can artificial neural networks learn to represent inflectional morphology and generalize to new words as human speakers do? Kirov and Cotterell (2018) argue that the answer is yes: modern Encoder-Decoder (ED) architectures learn human-like behavior when inflecting English verbs, such as extending the regular past tense form /-(e)d/ to novel words. However, their work does not address the criticism raised by Marcus et al. (1995): that neural models may learn to extend not the regular, but the most frequent class — and thus fail on tasks like German number inflection, where infrequent suffixes like /-s/ can still be productively generalized. To investigate this question, we first collect a new dataset from German speakers (production and ratings of plural forms for novel nouns) that is designed to avoid sources of information unavailable to the ED model. The speaker data show high variability, and two suffixes evince regular behavior, appearing more often with phonologically atypical inputs. Encoder-decoder models do generalize the most frequently produced plural class, but do not show human-like variability or regular extension of these other plural markers. We conclude that modern neural models may still struggle with minority-class generalization.},
keywords = {morphology, compling},
}
@Article{Fonteyn2021,
author = {Fonteyn, Lauren},
date = {2021},
journaltitle = {Glossa},
title = {Varying Abstractions},
doi = {10.5334/gjgl.1323},
journalsubtitle = {journal of general linguistics},
number = {1},
pages = {1--28},
subtitle = {a conceptual vs. distributional view on prepositional polysemy},
volume = {6},
abstract = {The term meaning, as it is presently employed in Linguistics, is a polysemous concept, covering a broad range of operational definitions. Focussing on two of these definitions, meaning as concept and meaning as context (also known as distributional semantics), this paper explores to what extent these operational definitions lead to converging conclusions regarding the number and nature of distinct senses a polysemous form covers. More specifically, it investigates whether the sense network that emerges from the principled polysemy model of over as proposed by Tyler & Evans (2003; 2001) can be reconstructed by the neural language model BERT. The study assesses whether the contextual information encoded in BERT embeddings can be employed to succesfully (i) recognize the abstract sense categories and (ii) replicate the relative distances between the senses of over proposed in the principled polysemy model. The results suggest that, while there is partial convergence, the two models ultimately lead to different global abstractions because the imagistic information that plays a key role in conceptual approaches to prepositional meaning may not be encoded in contextualized word embeddings.},
keywords = {semantics, compling},
}
@Book{Potts2005,
author = {Potts, Christopher},
date = {2005},
title = {The Logic of Conventional Implicatures},
publisher = {Oxford University Press},
}
@Comment{jabref-meta: databaseType:biblatex;}
@Comment{jabref-meta: grouping: