Computational linguistics
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
Related e |
Featured: |
Computational linguistics is an interdisciplinary field concerned with the statistical or rule-based modeling of natural language from a computational perspective.
Traditionally, computational linguistics was usually performed by computer scientists who had specialized in the application of computers to the processing of a natural language. Computational linguists often work as members of interdisciplinary teams, including linguists (specifically trained in linguistics), language experts (persons with some level of ability in the languages relevant to a given project), and computer scientists. In general, computational linguistics draws upon the involvement of linguists, computer scientists, experts in artificial intelligence, mathematicians, logicians, philosophers, cognitive scientists, cognitive psychologists, psycholinguists, anthropologists and neuroscientists, among others.
Computational linguistics has theoretical and applied components, where theoretical computational linguistics takes up issues in theoretical linguistics and cognitive science, and applied computational linguistics focuses on the practical outcome of modeling human language use.
See also
- Association for Computational Linguistics
- Collostructional analysis
- Computational lexicology
- Computational Linguistics (journal)
- Computational science
- Computational semiotics
- Computer-assisted reviewing
- Dialog systems
- Grammar induction
- Human speechome project
- Internet linguistics
- National Centre for Text Mining
- Natural language processing
- North American Computational Linguistics Olympiad
- Quantitative linguistics
- Semantic relatedness
- Systemic functional linguistics
- Translation memory
- Ubiquitous Knowledge Processing Lab
- Universal Networking Language