DocumentCode
293420
Title
Inferences in natural language understanding
Author
Chan, Samuel W K
Author_Institution
Sch. of Comput. Sci. & Eng., New South Wales Univ., Kensington, NSW, Australia
Volume
2
fYear
1995
fDate
20-24 Mar 1995
Firstpage
935
Abstract
This paper presents a subsymbolic fuzzy approach to language understanding. The author addresses the issue of natural language understanding in terms of two fundamental inferences: 1) the reasoning of implicit knowledge surrounding the text; and 2) the deduction from the explicit context of the sentences. Fuzzy reasoning and connectionist techniques are employed in order to yield right results. They are flexible enough to work in a natural language environment which is characterized by almost infinite variability. Firstly, linguistic meanings are encoded in subsymbolic microfeatures. A technique of fuzzy reasoning in a fuzzy rule matrix is used to capture the surrounding knowledge in the text. Finally, a fuzzy unification process is employed to form a coherent structure and comprehend the context
Keywords
fuzzy logic; natural languages; neural nets; connectionist techniques; deduction; fuzzy reasoning; fuzzy rule matrix; implicit knowledge; inferences; linguistic meanings; natural language understanding; subsymbolic fuzzy approach; subsymbolic microfeatures; Australia; Computer science; Context; Fuzzy reasoning; Grounding; Humans; Logic; Natural languages; Set theory;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Fuzzy Systems, 1995. International Joint Conference of the Fourth IEEE International Conference on Fuzzy Systems and The Second International Fuzzy Engineering Symposium., Proceedings of 1995 IEEE Int
Conference_Location
Yokohama
Print_ISBN
0-7803-2461-7
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/FUZZY.1995.409794
Filename
409794
Link To Document