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Symbolic linguistic representation
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{{More citations needed|date=April 2024}} A '''symbolic linguistic representation''' is a representation of an [[utterance]] that uses [[symbol]]s to represent linguistic information about the utterance, such as information about [[phonetics]], [[phonology]], [[morphology (linguistics)|morphology]], [[syntax]], or [[semantics]]. Symbolic linguistic representations are different from non-symbolic representations, such as recordings, because they use symbols to represent linguistic information rather than measurements. Symbolic representations are widely used in linguistics. In [[principle of compositionality|syntactic representations]], atomic category symbols often refer to the syntactic category of a [[lexical item]]. Examples include [[lexical categories]] such as auxiliary verbs ('''INFL'''),<ref>Sells 1985, p. 20.</ref> [[phrasal categories]] such as relative clauses ('''SRel''') and [[empty category|empty categories]] such as wh-traces ('''t<sub>WH</sub>''').<sup>{{cite patent |country=US |number=10133724 |status=patent}}</sup> In some formalisms, such as [[Lexical Functional Grammar]], these symbols can refer to both grammatical functions and values of [[grammatical categories]]. In linguistics, empty categories are represented with '''β '''. Symbolic representations also appear in [[phonetic transcription]], descriptions of phonological processes, [[trochees]], [[phonemes]], [[morphophonemes]], [[natural classes]], semantic features such as [[animacy]] and the qualia structures of [[Generative Lexicon |Generative Lexicon Theory]].<ref>Pustejovsky 1995</ref> In natural language processing, linguistic representations, such as syntactic representations, have long been in the service of improving the output of information retrieval systems, such as search engines and machine translation systems.<ref>Watanabe et al, 2000</ref> Recently, in [[span-based neural constituency parsing]] lexical items begin as [[wordpiece]] tokens or [[byte pair encoding|BPE]] [[tiktokens]] before they are transformed into several other representations: [[word vectors]] (word encoder), terminal nodes (span vectors, fenceposts), non-terminal nodes (span classifier), parse tree ([[neural CKY]]). It's suggested that the mapping from terminals to non-terminals learns what constructions are permitted by the language.<ref>Jurafsky & Martin, Chapter 17.7, pg 17</ref> Symbolic linguistic representations are frequently used in [[computational linguistics]].{{Citation needed|date=March 2024}} Other representations in linguistics that are not symbols or measurements include [[phonotactics|rules]] and [[sonority hierarchy|rankings]]. == Notes == {{reflist}} == External links == * [https://ling.sprachwiss.uni-konstanz.de/pages/xle/doc/notations.html LFG notation] == References == * Sells, Peter (1985). ''Lectures on Contemporary Syntactic Theories: An Introduction to Government-Binding Theory, Generalized Phrase Structure Grammar, and Lexical-Function Grammar''. CSLI. * Pustejovsky, James (1995). ''The Generative Lexicon''. MIT Press. ISBN 9780262661409. * Watanabe et al (2000). ''Improving Natural Language Processing by Linguistic Document Annotation''. In Proceedings of the COLING-2000 Workshop on Semantic Annotation and Intelligent Content, pages 20β27, Centre Universitaire, Luxembourg. International Committee on Computational Linguistics. * Jurafsky, Daniel; Martin, James H. (2024). ''Speech and Language Processing. Draft of February 3, 2024.'' * https://web.stanford.edu/~jurafsky/slp3/17.pdf#section.17.7 {{cite patent | country = US | number = 10133724 | status = patent | title = Syntactic classification of natural language sentences with respect to a targeted element | pubdate = 2018-11-20 | fdate = 2016-08-22 | pridate = 2016-08-22 | invent1 = Sean L. Bethard | invent2 = Edward G. Katz | invent3 = Christopher Phipps | assign1 = International Business Machines Corp }} {{DEFAULTSORT:Symbolic Linguistic Representation}} [[Category:Linguistics]] [[Category:Phonetics]] [[Category:Phonology]] [[Category:Linguistic morphology]] [[Category:Syntax]] [[Category:Semantics]] [[Category:Computational linguistics]] {{comp-ling-stub}} {{phonetics-stub}} {{ling-morph-stub}} {{syntax-stub}}
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