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The KBMT Project: A Case Study in Knowledge-Based Machine Translation
 
 
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The KBMT Project: A Case Study in Knowledge-Based Machine Translation [Paperback]

Kenneth Goodman (Editor), Sergei Nirenburg (Editor)

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Book Description

July 15, 1991 1558601295 978-1558601291 1

Machine translation of natural languages is one of the most complex and comprehensive applications of computational linguistics and artificial intelligence. This is especially true of knowledge-based machine translation (KBMT) systems, which require many knowledge resources and processing modules to carry out the necessary levels of analysis, representation and generation of meaning and form. The number of real-world problems, tasks, and solutions involved in developing any realistic-size knowledge-based machine translation system is enormous. It is thus difficult for researchers in the field to learn what a system "really does".



This book fills that need with a detailed case study of a KBMT system implemented at the Center for Machine Translation at Carnegie Mellon University. The research consists in part of the creation of a system for translation between English and Japanese. The corpora used in the project were manuals for installing and maintaining IBM personal computers (sponsorship by IBM, through its Tokyo Research Laboratory) Individual chapters describe the interlingua texts used in knowledge-based machine translation, the grammar formalism embodied in the system, the grammars and lexicons and their roles in the translation process, the process of source language analysis, an augmentation module that interactively and automatically resolves ambiguities remaining after source language analysis, and the generator, which produces target language sentences. Detailed appendices illustrate the process from analysis through generation.



This book is intended for developers, researchers and advanced students in natural language processing and computational linguistics, including all those who have an interest in machine translation and machine-aided translation.


Editorial Reviews

From the Back Cover

Machine translation of natural languages is one of the most complex and comprehensive applications of computational linguistics and artificial intelligence. This is especially true of knowledge-based machine translation (KBMT) systems, which require many knowledge resources and processing modules to carry out the necessary levels of analysis, representation and generation of meaning and form. The number of real-world problems, tasks, and solutions involved in developing any realistic-size knowledge-based machine translation system is enormous. It is thus difficult for researchers in the field to learn what a system "really does".



This book fills that need with a detailed case study of a KBMT system implemented at the Center for Machine Translation at Carnegie Mellon University. The research consists in part of the creation of a system for translation between English and Japanese. The corpora used in the project were manuals for installing and maintaining IBM personal computers (sponsorship by IBM, through its Tokyo Research Laboratory) Individual chapters describe the interlingua texts used in knowledge-based machine translation, the grammar formalism embodied in the system, the grammars and lexicons and their roles in the translation process, the process of source language analysis, an augmentation module that interactively and automatically resolves ambiguities remaining after source language analysis, and the generator, which produces target language sentences. Detailed appendices illustrate the process from analysis through generation.



This book is intended for developers, researchers and advanced students in natural language processing and computational linguistics, including all those who have an interest in machine translation and machine-aided translation.

About the Author

Edited by Kenneth Goodman and Sergei Nirenburg

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Machine translation (MT) systems have been of three major types: direct, transfer and interlingua. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
ref definite, valency trans, subcat trans, structural mapping rules, mapping rule interpreter, proper subcategorization, lexical mapping rules, root diskette drive, interlingua text, root system unit, discourse cohesion markers, last auxiliary verb, unsafe eliminations, source language lexical units, slot subj, generation mapping rules, mapping rule file, mood imp, slot obj, root erase, root imp, lexicon frame, theme slot, generation lexicon, extra parses
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Firing Rule, Evaluate Lisp, Lexical Functional Grammar, Frame Edit, Lisp Exit
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