AbstractLinguists rely on intuitive conceptions of structure when comparing expressions and languages. In an algebraic presentation of a language, some natural notions of similarity can be rigorously defined (e.g. among elements of a language, equivalence w.r.t. isomorphisms of the language; and among languages, equivalence w.r.t. isomorphisms of symmetry groups), but it turns out that slightly more complex and nonstandard notions are needed to capture the kinds of comparisons linguists want to make. This paper identifies some of the important notions of structural similarity, with attention to similarity claims that are prominent in the current linguistic tradition of transformational grammar
Contains fulltext : 77407.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)According to t...
This paper addresses the problems of mea-suring similarity between languages— where the term languag...
A neural language model trained on a text corpus can be used to induce distributed representations o...
Linguists rely on intuitive conceptions of structure when comparing expressions and languages. In an...
Divide the context-free languages into equivalence classes in the following way: L1 and L2 are in th...
Although the general notion of "phonological similarity" has figured prominently in linguistic schol...
That it is useful to compare language structures may sound trivial, but it has sometimes been regard...
This study addresses the question whether the borrowability of linguistic forms, in particular affix...
A neural language model trained on a text corpus can be used to induce distributed representations o...
The focus of this presentation is the following observation: words that are phonetically similar acr...
The article deals with the modeling of objects in a comparative way. The sentence structure is the s...
The main aim of this book is to address a fundamental question in linguistics, namely why languages ...
Multilingual representations have mostly been evaluated based on their performance on specific tasks...
Do all languages convey semantic knowledge in the same way? If language simply mirrors the structure...
In this paper we show how a single framework for computational modeling of linguistic similarity can...
Contains fulltext : 77407.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)According to t...
This paper addresses the problems of mea-suring similarity between languages— where the term languag...
A neural language model trained on a text corpus can be used to induce distributed representations o...
Linguists rely on intuitive conceptions of structure when comparing expressions and languages. In an...
Divide the context-free languages into equivalence classes in the following way: L1 and L2 are in th...
Although the general notion of "phonological similarity" has figured prominently in linguistic schol...
That it is useful to compare language structures may sound trivial, but it has sometimes been regard...
This study addresses the question whether the borrowability of linguistic forms, in particular affix...
A neural language model trained on a text corpus can be used to induce distributed representations o...
The focus of this presentation is the following observation: words that are phonetically similar acr...
The article deals with the modeling of objects in a comparative way. The sentence structure is the s...
The main aim of this book is to address a fundamental question in linguistics, namely why languages ...
Multilingual representations have mostly been evaluated based on their performance on specific tasks...
Do all languages convey semantic knowledge in the same way? If language simply mirrors the structure...
In this paper we show how a single framework for computational modeling of linguistic similarity can...
Contains fulltext : 77407.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)According to t...
This paper addresses the problems of mea-suring similarity between languages— where the term languag...
A neural language model trained on a text corpus can be used to induce distributed representations o...