Phrase structure trees bear more fruit than you would have thought
Computational Linguistics
Finite state methods in natural language processing
Natural Language Engineering
Natural language question answering: the view from here
Natural Language Engineering
Extended finite state models of language
Natural Language Engineering
Finite state morphology and information retrieval
Natural Language Engineering
Natural languages and the Chomsky hierarchy
EACL '85 Proceedings of the second conference on European chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics
Describing syntax with star-free regular expressions
EACL '03 Proceedings of the tenth conference on European chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics - Volume 1
Weighted automata and weighted logics
Theoretical Computer Science
Capturing practical natural language transformations
Machine Translation
Regular Expressions and Predicate Logic in Finite-State Language Processing
Proceedings of the 2009 conference on Finite-State Methods and Natural Language Processing: Post-proceedings of the 7th International Workshop FSMNLP 2008
Aural Pattern Recognition Experiments and the Subregular Hierarchy
Journal of Logic, Language and Information
Hi-index | 0.00 |
For the past two decades, specialised events on finite-state methods have been successful in presenting interesting studies on natural language processing to the public through journals and collections. The FSMNLP workshops have become well-known among researchers and are now the main forum of the Association for Computational Linguistics' (ACL) Special Interest Group on Finite-State Methods (SIGFSM). The current issue on finite-state methods and models in natural language processing was planned in 2008 in this context as a response to a call for special issue proposals. In 2010, the issue received a total of sixteen submissions, some of which were extended and updated versions of workshop papers, and others which were completely new. The final selection, consisting of only seven papers that could fit into one issue, is not fully representative, but complements the prior special issues in a nice way. The selected papers showcase a few areas where finite-state methods have less than obvious and sometimes even groundbreaking relevance to natural language processing (NLP) applications.