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Martin Švec
人物简介:
Grammars with Context Conditions and Their Applications书籍相关信息
- ISBN:9780471718314
- 作者:Alexander Meduna / Martin Švec
- 出版社:Wiley-Interscience
- 出版时间:2005-6-7
- 页数:216
- 价格:USD 117.00
- 纸张:暂无纸张
- 装帧:Hardcover
- 开本:暂无开本
- 语言:暂无语言
- 适合人群:linguists, computational linguists, natural language processing researchers, data scientists, machine learning engineers, computer scientists interested in language technologies
- TAG:Machine Learning / natural language processing / computational linguistics / linguistic grammar / context-aware language models / applications in NLP
- 豆瓣评分:暂无豆瓣评分
- 更新时间:2025-05-17 00:05:47
内容简介:
This is the essential guide to grammars with context conditions. This advanced computer science book systematically and compactly summarizes the current knowledge about grammars with context conditions, an important area of formal language theory. According to the types of context conditions, this self contained reference classifies them into grammars with context conditions placed on the domains of grammatical derivations, the use of grammatical productions, and the neighborhood of the rewritten symbols. The focus is on grammatical generative power, important properties, simplification, reduction, implementation, and applications, most of which are related to microbiology. The text features: Up to date coverage of grammatical concepts based on context conditions; Self contained explanations without assumption of any previous knowledge; Clear definitions and exact proofs preceded by intuitive explanations; Numerous easy to implement grammatical transformations; Realistic applications; and, Relation to mathematics, linguistics, and biology. Additional material and information about the book is available on accompanying Web site (see preface for details). Practitioners and advanced students in theoretical computer science and related areas including mathematics, linguistics, and molecular biology will find "Grammars with Context Conditions and Their Applications" an essential reference for this cutting edge area of formal language theory.