http:^^www.icsi.berkeley.edu^lzero^
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EDU^LZERO^
87 行
Date: Wed, 20 Nov 1996 19:25:11 GMT
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Last-modified: Mon, 04 Dec 1995 21:44:09 GMT
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<HTML><HEAD><TITLE>L0 Home Page</TITLE></HEAD><BODY><H1><!WA0><img align=top src="http://www.icsi.berkeley.edu/LZERO/aspect1.gif"> L0 - Computational modeling ofsemantics and syntax</H1>This page is under construction, and will be fleshed out with moredetailed information soon.L0 (Also called L-zero) is a research project in computationalsemantics headed by <!WA1><ahref="http://www.icsi.berkeley.edu/~jfeldman">Jerry Feldman</a> of <!WA2><ahref="http://www.icsi.berkeley.edu/">the International ComputerScience Institute</a> and George Lakoff of the U.C. BerkeleyDepartment of Linguistics. <!WA3><Ahref="http://www.icsi.berkeley.edu/~shastri">Lokendra Shastri</a> isanother senior researcher on the project. <p>There is a mailing list for discussion of lzero issues andannouncements of lzero meetings. It is at lzero@icsi.berkeley.edu.To subscribe, send mail to <!WA4><a href="mailto:lzero-request@icsi.berkeley.edu">lzero-request@icsi.berkeley.edu</a>.<p>A Good first place to look for information is the paper <!WA5><ahref="http://www.icsi.berkeley.edu/ftp/global/pub/ai/lzero/first_five_years.ps.Z">Lzero:The First Five Years</a>.<p>The current set of Graduate Students working on the project is<ul><li> <!WA6><a href="http://www.icsi.berkeley.edu/~dbailey">David Bailey</a><li> <!WA7><a href="http://www.icsi.berkeley.edu/~snarayan">Srini Narayan</a><li> <!WA8><a href="http://www.icsi.berkeley.edu/~jsegal">Jonathan Segal</a></ul>The first thesis to come directly out of the L-zero project was that of <!WA9><ahref="http://www.ccp.uchicago.edu/faculty/Terry_Regier/">TerryRegier</a>, who is now a professor at the University of Chicago. Hisresearch produced a structured connectionist model which couldlearn to categorize spatial scenes with spatial prepositions from avariety of natural languages, without using negative evidence. Ashort paper version of his research can be found as:<p><dt> <!WA10><a href=file://ccp.uchicago.edu/regier/cogling94.ps> Regier,Terry (1995). A model of the human capacity for categorizing spatialrelations, <i>Cognitive Linguistics,</i> vol. 6, no. 1,pp. 63-88.</a><p>The second thesis to come directly out of the project was that of <!WA11><ahref="http://www-speech.sri.com/people/stolcke/index.html">AndreasStolcke</a>. His research focussed on the bayesian learning ofprobabilistic language models. His thesis can be found as:<p><dt> <!WA12><AHREF="gopher://smorgasbord.ICSI.Berkeley.EDU:70/00/usr/local/ftp/ai/stolcke/thesis.ps.Z">Stolcke,Andreas (1994). Bayesian Learningof Probabilistic Language Models (UC Berkeley thesis)</A><p>If you don't want to read his whole thesis, you can read the<!WA13><ahref="ftp://ftp.icsi.berkeley.edu/pub/ai/stolcke/icgi94.ps.Z">13 page"executive summary"</a></p><P><HR><ADDRESS><!WA14><A href="mailto:jsegal@icsi.berkeley.edu">Jonathan Segal</A> - Last modified $Date: 1995/12/04 21:44:08 $</ADDRESS></BODY></HTML>
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