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Constraint Solving and Language Processing

First International Workshop, CSLP 2004, Roskilde, Denmark, September 1-3, 2004, Revised Selected and Invited Papers

  • Conference proceedings
  • © 2005

Overview

Part of the book series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS, volume 3438)

Part of the book sub series: Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence (LNAI)

Included in the following conference series:

Conference proceedings info: CSLP 2004.

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Table of contents (12 papers)

  1. Invited Papers

  2. Contributed Papers

Other volumes

  1. Constraint Solving and Language Processing

Keywords

About this book

This volume contains selected and thoroughly revised papers plus contributions from invited speakers presented at the First International Workshop on C- straint Solving and Language Processing, held in Roskilde, Denmark, September 1–3, 2004. Constraint Programming and Constraint Solving, in particular Constraint Logic Programming, appear to be a very promising platform, perhaps the most promising present platform, for bringing forward the state of the art in natural language processing, this due to the naturalness in speci?cation and the direct relation to e?cient implementation. Language, in the present context, may - fer to written and spoken language, formal and semiformal language, and even general input data to multimodal and pervasive systems, which can be handled in very much the same ways using constraint programming. The notion of constraints, with slightly di?ering meanings, apply in the ch- acterization of linguistic and cognitive phenomena, in formalized linguistic m- els as well as in implementation-oriented frameworks. Programming techniques for constraint solving have been, and still are, in a period with rapid devel- ment of new e?cient methods and paradigms from which language processing can pro?t. A common metaphor for human language processing is one big c- straintsolvingprocessinwhichthedi?erent(-lyspeci?ed)linguisticandcognitive phases take place in parallel and with mutual cooperation, which ?ts quite well with current constraint programming paradigms.

Editors and Affiliations

  • Research group PLIS: Programming, Logic and Intelligent Systems, Department of Communication, Business and Information Technologies, Roskilde University, Roskilde, Denmark

    Henning Christiansen

  • Department of Computational Linguistics, Center for Computational Modeling of Language, Copenhagen Business School, Frederiksberg, Denmark

    Peter Rossen Skadhauge

  • Computer Science, Roskilde University, Roskilde, Denmark

    Jørgen Villadsen

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