Canadian Journal of Applied Linguistics (Dec 2003)

Towards an Information-Based Procedural Grammar for Natural Language Understanding

  • Alexandre Sévigny

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 2
pp. 187 – 217

Abstract

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Abstract This article describes a number of phenomena which must be taken into account in order to model aspects of information transmission/reception which occur during natural language processing. It presents a brief comparison with two prominent and similar approaches (Dynamic Syntax and Left-Associative Grammar) followed by a detailed description of the model proposed—referred to as Discourse Information Grammar or DIG. It further provides an illustration of the model and a brief discussion of its potential applications to computer-assisted language learning, and concludes with a definition of what is understood by “information” in Discourse Information Grammar.