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This book provides the first broad yet thorough coverage of issues in
morphological theory. It includes a wide array of techniques and
systems in computational morphology (including discussion of their
limitations), and describes some unusual applications.
Sproat motivates the study of computational morphology by arguing that
a computational natural language system, such as a parser or a
generator, must incorporate a model of morphology. He discusses a
range of applications for programs with knowledge of morphology, some
of which are not generally found in the literature. Sproat then
provides an overview of some of the basic descriptive facts about
morphology and issues in theoretical morphology and (lexical)
phonology, as well as psycholinguistic evidence for human processing
of morphological structure. He take up the basic techniques that have
been proposed for doing morphological processing and discusses at
length various systems (such as DECOMP and KIMMO) that incorporate
part or all of those techniques, pointing out the inadequacies of such
systems from both a descriptive and a computational point of view. He
concludes by touching on interesting peripheral areas such as the
analysis of complex nominals in English, and on the main contributions
of Rumelhart and McClelland's connectionism to the computational
analysis of words.
Richard Sproat is Member of the Technical Staff at the AT&T
Bell Laboratories.
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