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Mathematical Models of Spoken Language 282 pages - hardback John Wiley and Sons Ltd - (isbn 0-470-84407-8) Jan. 2005 |
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| Price: |
111,15 EUR
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| Author(s): |
Levinson, Stephen
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| Description: |
Mathematical
Modes of Spoken Language presents the motivations for, intuitions
behind, and basic mathematical models of natural spoken language
communication. A comprehensive overview is given of all aspects of the
problem from the physics of speech production through the hierarchy of
linguistic structure and ending with some observations on language and
mind. The author comprehensively explores the argument that these
modern technologies are actually the most extensive compilations of
linguistic knowledge available.Throughout the book, the emphasis is on
placing all the material in a mathematically coherent and
computationally tractable framework that captures linguistic structure.
It presents material that appears nowhere else and gives a unification
of formalisms and perspectives used by linguists and engineers. Its
unique features include a coherent nomenclature that emphasizes the
deep connections amongst the diverse mathematical models and explores
the methods by means of which they capture linguistic structure. This
contrasts with some of the superficial similarities described in the
existing literature; the historical background and origins of the
theories and models; the connections to related disciplines, e.g.
artificial intelligence, automata theory and information theory; an
elucidation of the current debates and their intellectual origins; many
important little-known results and some original proofs of fundamental
results, e.g. a geometric interpretation of parameter estimation
techniques for stochastic models and finally the author's own unique
perspectives on the future of this discipline. There is a vast
literature on Speech Recognition and Synthesis however, this book is
unlike any other in the field. Although it appears to be a rapidly
advancing field, the fundamentals have not changed in decades. Most of
the results are presented in journals from which it is difficult to
integrate and evaluate all of these recent ideas. Some of the
fundamentals have been collected into textbooks, which give detailed
descriptions of the techniques but no motivation or perspective. The
linguistic texts are mostly descriptive and pictorial, lacking the
mathematical and computational aspects. This book strikes a useful
balance by covering a wide range of ideas in a common framework. It
provides all the basic algorithms and computational techniques and an
analysis and perspective, which allows one to intelligently read the
latest literature and understand state-of-the-art techniques as they
evolve.
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| Contents List: |
Author's
preface. Introduction. Preliminaries. Mathematical models of linguistic
structure. Syntactic analysis. Grammatical inference. Information
theoretic analysis of speech communication. Automatic speech
recognition and constructive theories of language. Automatic speech
understanding and semantics. Theories of mind and language. A
speculation on the prospects for a science of the mind.
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| Weight: | 692 g | |||||||
| Dimensions: | 252 x 177 | |||||||
| Publisher: | John Wiley and Sons Ltd | |||||||
| John Wiley and Sons Ltd | ||||||||