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Left: Final remarks Up: Phonology-based lexical knowledge representation Right: Access to PolyLex resources

Web resources and further reading

The general approach to phonologically-based NLP lexicons outlined in the first half of this tutorial emerges from the work of Bleiching (1992), Bleiching (1994), Cahill (1990a), Cahill & Gazdar (1990), Cahill (1993), Carson (1988), Gibbon (1992), and Hübener & Carson-Berndsen (1994).

The nonsegmental event-based approach to phonological description outlined in the sections on nonsegmental phonology and lexica for speech is presented in much greater detail in Carson-Berndsen (1990, 1992, 1998), Carson-Berndsen & Gibbon (), and Hübener & Carson-Berndsen (1994). Related work on feature representations in DATR can be found in Gibbon (1992) and Cahill (1993). Background information on multilinear descriptions in phonology can be found in Goldsmith (1976, 1990), Browman & Goldstein (1986, 1989) and Bird (1995). Further information on the delayed synchronisation approach to speech recognition can be found in Kirchhoff (1996) and on the multi-tape finite state transducers for autosegmental representations in Wiebe (1992).


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The PolyLex Web Pages. Copyright © Lynne Cahill, Julie Carson-Berndsen & Gerald Gazdar, Tuesday 3 November 1998