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Ohio State Dissertations in Linguistics (OSDL)
Jean Godby (2002)
A computational study of lexicalized noun phrases in English
Advisor: Craige Roberts
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Abstract:
Lexicalized noun phrases are noun phrases that function as words. In English, lexicalized noun phrases are often realized as noun-noun compounds such as theater ticket and garbage man, or as adjective-noun phrases such as black market and high school. In specialized or technical subjects, phrases such as urban planning, air traffic control, highway engineering and combinatorial mathematics are conventional names for concepts that are just as important as single-word terms such as adsorbents, hydrology, or aerodynamics. But despite the fact that lexicalized noun phrases represent useful vocabulary and are cited in dictionaries, thesauri and book indexes, the traditional linguistic literature has failed to identify consistent and categorical formal criteria for identifying them.
This study develops and evaluates a linguistically natural computational method for recognizing lexicalized noun phrases in a large corpus of English-language engineering text by synthesizing the insights of studies in traditional linguistics and computational linguists. From the scholarship in theoretical linguistics, the analysis adopts the perspective that lexicalized noun phrases represent the names of concepts that are important to a community of speakers and have survived a single context of use. Theoretical linguists have also proposed diagnostic tests for identifying lexicalized noun phrases, many of which can be formalized in a computational study. From the scholarship in computational linguistics, the analysis incorporates the view that a linguistic investigation can be extended and verified by processing relevant evidence from a corpus of text,which can be evaluated using mathematical models that do not require categorical input.
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