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Modeling information structure in a cross-linguistic perspective
Sanghoun Song

Series

ISBNs

digital: 978-3-946234-90-6
hardcover: 978-3-944675-97-8
softcover: 978-3-946234-64-7

DOI

DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.818365
Published: 20170704

Cite as

Song, Sanghoun . 2017. Modeling information structure in a cross-linguistic perspective : . (Topics at the Grammar-Discourse Interface 1). Berlin: Language Science Press.
@book{tgdi1,
author = {Song, Sanghoun },
title = {Modeling information structure in a cross-linguistic perspective: },
year = {2017},
series = {tgdi},
number = {1},
address = {Berlin},
publisher = {Language Science Press}
}

Proofreaders

  • Amr El-Zawawy
  • Christian Döhler
  • Ikmi Nur Oktavianti
  • Andreas Hölzl
  • Natsuko Nakagawa
  • Jean Nitzke
  • Ken Manson
  • Gerald Delahunty
  • Evans Gesure

Typesetters

Illustrators

About this book

This study makes substantial contributions to both the theoretical and computational treatment of information structure, with a specific focus on creating natural language processing applications such as multilingual machine translation systems. The present study first provides cross-linguistic findings in regards to information structure meanings and markings. Building upon such findings, the current model represents information structure within the HPSG/MRS framework using Individual Constraints. The primary goal of the present study is to create a multilingual grammar model of information structure for the LinGO Grammar Matrix system. The present study explores the construction of a grammar library for creating customized grammar incorporating information structure and illustrates how the information structure-based model improves performance of transfer-based machine translation.

About Sanghoun Song

Sanghoun Song (1977) is specialized in grammar engineering based on the HPSG and MRS formalism. He graduated from Korea University in Seoul, where he earned his BA and MA degree in linguistics. He received a PhD in linguistics from University of Washington in Seattle. Afterwards, he worked at the computational linguistics lab. at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore as a research fellow. Now, he is an assistant professor at Incheon National University. His research interests include grammatical theory (the theory of computational grammar from a cross-linguistic perspective), experimental syntax (the use of acceptability judgments as evidence for linguistic theories), and corpus linguistics (the use of data-based methods to capture linguistic phenomena in human languages).

Chapters