Results 211 to 220 of about 23,338 (267)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Utterances, Sub‐utterances and Token‐Reflexivity

Theoria, 2020
AbstractThe popular interpretation of token‐reflexivism states that at the level of logical form, indexicals and demonstratives are disguised descriptions that employ complex demonstratives or special quotation‐mark names involving particular tokens of the appropriate expression‐types.
openaire   +2 more sources

Anchoring Utterances

Topics in Cognitive Science, 2020
AbstractFor people to communicate with each other, they must tie, oranchor, each of their utterances to the speaker, addressees, place, time, display, and purpose of that utterance. Doing this takes coordination. Producers mustindexeach of these entities for their addressees, and addressees mustidentifyeach of the entities the producers are indexing ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Utter Chaos

Computer, 2010
In this paper, the author mentions that all new fields of scientific endeavor will go through periods of utter chaos before they settle into a regular discipline with well-defined terms, stable categories, and general methods. The task of any researcher is to work through the early literature and find that key moment when ideas begin to solidify.The ...
openaire   +1 more source

Speech utterance classification

2003 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing, 2003. Proceedings. (ICASSP '03)., 2003
The paper presents a series of experiments on speech utterance classification performed on the ATIS corpus. We compare the performance of n-gram classifiers with that of Naive Bayes and maximum entropy classifiers. The n-gram classifiers have the advantage that one can use a single pass system (concurrent speech recognition and classification) whereas ...
Ciprian Chelba   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Analyzing intention in utterances

Artificial Intelligence, 1980
This paper describes a model of cooperative behavior and describes how such a model can be applied in a natural language understanding system. We assume that agents attempt to recognize the plans of other agents and, then, use this plan when deciding what response to make. In particular, we show that, given a setting in which purposeful dialogues occur,
James F. Allen, C. Raymond Perrault
openaire   +1 more source

Proving self-utterances

Journal of Automated Reasoning, 1987
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
Michael J. Miller, Donald Perlis
openaire   +2 more sources

Fiction, Meaning, and Utterance

Inquiry, 2001
A Gricean preamble concludes that though utterances have unintended meanings, those cannot be considered apart from their intended meanings. Intention distinguishes artworks from natural phenomena. To allocate an artwork to a genre, to accept its normal authorial boundaries and that its content is not random but chosen, is to concede intention's ...
openaire   +1 more source

Utterances

2019
This chapter examines utterances. The unit that Greek grammarians called a logos, and Latin grammarians an oratio, was the largest in a hierarchy. Oratio is here translated by English ‘utterance’. Utterances were literally sounds uttered and as such, they had a physical reality.
openaire   +1 more source

Intentions in Utterance Interpretation

2015
Which is the role of intentions in utterance interpretation? I sketch an argument to the effect that the role of intentions is indirect; the interpreter’s assignment of meaning rather depends on considerations of what meaning is most reasonably assigned and her interest.
openaire   +1 more source

From Morpheme to Utterance

Language, 1946
This paper presents a formalized procedure for describing utterances directly in terms of sequences of morphemes rather than of single morphemes. It thus covers an important part of what is usually included under syntax. When applied in a particular language, the procedure yields a compact statement of what sequences of morphemes occur in the language,
openaire   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy