Computational Phonology
Computational phonology is one of the newest areas of computational linguistics, and is experiencing rapid growth as its practitioners apply the wealth of theories, technologies and methodologies of computational linguistics to phonology. This book is the first to survey these developments, and it does so in a way that is accessible to computational linguists, phonologists and computer scientists alike. The interests of these diverse groups overlap in the subject area of constraints. The goal of this book is to explore the use of constraints in modern non-linear phonology and then - drawing on insights from constraint-based grammar and constraint logic programming - to formalise and implement a constraint-based phonology.
- Of appeal to phonologists, computational linguists and computer scientists
- First book-length exposition of much talked about new theory
Product details
February 1995Hardback
9780521474962
219 pages
235 × 156 × 19 mm
0.483kg
Unavailable - out of print June 2002
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. A logical foundation for phonology
- 3. A critique of destructive processes
- 4. A theory of segmental structure
- 5. Implementation
- 6. Conclusion
- Appendix: logical extensions
- References
- Indices.