Manning's Law

Manning's Law describes the combination of principles that need to be balanced in the design and growth of universal linguistic dependencies. These dependencies are used to describe and model syntactic relations, for all languages.[1][2] This supports natural language processing, and is a major topic, with its own event, thousands of linguistics and AI researchers working with and on it, and widely-adopted.[3] The law was put forward by Christopher D. Manning.

  1. ^ de Marneffe, Marie-Catherine; Manning, Christopher D.; Nivre, Joakim; Zeman, Daniel (13 July 2021). "Universal Dependencies". Computational Linguistics. 47 (2): 255–308. doi:10.1162/coli_a_00402. S2CID 219304854.
  2. ^ Nivre, Joakim; de Marneffe, M.C.; et al. (2016). "Universal dependencies v1: A multilingual treebank collection" (PDF). Proceedings of the 10th International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC).: 1659–1666.
  3. ^ "Universal Dependencies". Universal Dependencies. Retrieved 13 December 2016.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia · View on Wikipedia

Developed by Tubidy