Results 191 to 200 of about 5,536 (225)

The sublanguage of cross-coverage.

open access: green, 2002
Peter D. Stetson   +3 more
openalex   +1 more source

The Data Representation Sublanguage

1986
The level of a programming language is determined by the power of the semantic primitives which it provides. The operations provided by the ordinary low-level languages, e.g., languages of the FORTRAN type, all lie close to those elementary operations with a few dozen bits of input and output which computer hardware implements directly.
J. T. Schwartz   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

Sublanguage Analysis of Medical Weblogs

2014
Analysing medical social media data gains in importance given an increased availability of such data. In this paper, we analyse the language of medical blogs by means of a sublanguage analysis. More specifically, verb usage, semantic categories of used words as well as co-occurrence patterns are determined by means of natural language processing tools.
openaire   +2 more sources

ZPL: An array sublanguage

1994
The notion of isolating the “common case” is a well known computer science principle. This paper describes ZPL, a language that treats data parallelism as a common case of MIMD parallelism. This separation of concerns has many benefits. It allows us to define a clean and concise language for describing data parallel computations, and this in turn leads
Calvin Lin, Lawrence Snyder
openaire   +1 more source

Text classification in fragmented sublanguage domains

[1991] Proceedings. The Seventh IEEE Conference on Artificial Intelligence Application, 2002
The unique problems involved in developing text classification systems for texts that have low conceptual predictability are addressed. The authors present a shell called the FLUE (fragmented language understanding environment), which is capable of generating applications in fragmented sublanguage domains.
R.P. Frail, R.S. Freedman
openaire   +1 more source

Sublanguages and Controlled Languages

2016
Restricted subsystems of language can arise spontaneously in a subject-matter domain where speech or writing is used for special purposes. Alternatively, language restrictions can be imposed by conscious design. This chapter introduces the phenomenon of natural sublanguage in the first case, and contrasts it with the increasingly important notion of ...
openaire   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy