AMU English Department, Poznan, 1997, -107 pp.
The goals of the course include providing introductions to basic aspects of topics such as the following:
Representations:
What are the most appropriate data structures for phonemes, strings of phonemes, syllable structures, feature matrices, autosegmental lattices?
Procedures:
What procedures are required for mapping one phonological representation to another and implementing phonological rules?
Implementations:
How does one set about designing and making an implementation?
Applications:
What are typical applications of computational phonology?
Goals, Issues, Tasks
Frameworks
Phonotactics
Prolog: facts
Prolog: queries and rules
An append-rule (ID/LP) grammar in Prolog
First steps in computing phonotactics
Toward a finite state model of English syllables
Formalisms
Phonological parsing
Probabilistic finite state devices: HMMs
The goals of the course include providing introductions to basic aspects of topics such as the following:
Representations:
What are the most appropriate data structures for phonemes, strings of phonemes, syllable structures, feature matrices, autosegmental lattices?
Procedures:
What procedures are required for mapping one phonological representation to another and implementing phonological rules?
Implementations:
How does one set about designing and making an implementation?
Applications:
What are typical applications of computational phonology?
Goals, Issues, Tasks
Frameworks
Phonotactics
Prolog: facts
Prolog: queries and rules
An append-rule (ID/LP) grammar in Prolog
First steps in computing phonotactics
Toward a finite state model of English syllables
Formalisms
Phonological parsing
Probabilistic finite state devices: HMMs