Symposium Proceedings Brussels, November 26/27, 1991
First Statement of Responsibility
edited by Ewan Klein, Frank Veltman.
.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC
Place of Publication, Distribution, etc.
Berlin, Heidelberg
Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
1991
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Specific Material Designation and Extent of Item
(VIII, 192 pages 4 illustrations)
SERIES
Series Title
ESPRIT basic research series.
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
The Trend Towards Statistical Models in Natural Language Processing --; Phonological Data Types --; Surface Structure, Intonation, and "Focus" --; Lexical Issues in Natural Language Processing --; Linguistic Theory and Natural Language Processing --; Parametric Variation --; Approaches to Realisation in Natural Language Generation --; Deductive Interpretation --; On the Representation and Transmission of Information --; Natural Language: From Knowledge to Cognition --; Position papers for the panel session: Spoken Language Systems: Technological Goals and Integration Issues --; 1. Overview --; 2. Steps Towards Accurate Speech-to-Speech Translation --; 3. Future Directions of Speech Recognition Research --; 4. Speech-to-Speech Translation --; 5. The Role of Linguistic Data in Speech Technology --; 6. Text-to-Speech Research: Technological Goals and Integration Issues --; 7. System Architectures as the Key Issues for Speech Understanding --; Curricula Vitae.
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
This volume presents the proceedings of the Symposium on Natural Language and Speech held during the ESPRIT conference of November 1991. The symposiumwas organized by the newly launched Network of Excellence on Language and Speech which brings together the foremost European experts and institutions in the two domains. The proceedings contain ten invited papers from leading experts in language and speech research, together with a set of position papers from a panel session on 'Spoken language systems:technological goals and integration issues'. The papers cover a wide spectrum of research topics, ranging from logical aspects of discourse structure to problems of prosody and automatic speech understanding. A recurrent theme is the development of an integrated cognitively motivated theory of the process by which spoken language is understood. This volume is the second of the ESPRIT Basic Research Series. The ESPRIT Basic Research efforts aim at forging stronglinks between academic and industrial teams carrying out research, often interdisciplinary, at the forefront of information technology. The quality of content of this series and its broad distribution should have a majorimpact in making these advances accessible to both academic and industrial researchers.