Corpora: defining LE

From: Hamish Cunningham (hamish@dcs.shef.ac.uk)
Date: Fri Feb 18 2000 - 14:23:06 MET

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    hi

    as a couple of people have pointed out, I wrote a paper that says a fair
    bit on the topic:

    H. Cunningham. A Definition and Short History of Language Engineering.
    Journal of Natural Language Engineering, pages 1--16, vol 5, 1999

    the paper contrasts LE with CL and NLP, drawing particularly on papers
    by
    Gazdar, Thompson, and Boguraev/Garigliano/Tate (the latter being the
    editorial of the first issue of the Journal of NLE). e.g.:

    CL is a part of the science of language that uses computers as
    investigative tools; NLP is part of the science of computation whose
    subject
    matter is computer systems that process human language.

    Language Engineering is
    the discipline or act of engineering software systems that perform tasks
    involving processing human language. Both the construction process and
    its
    outputs are measurable and predictable. The literature of the field
    relates
    to both application of relevant scientific results and a body of
    practice.

    regards

    Hamish Cunningham
    Fellow in Computer Science, University of Sheffield
    http://www.dcs.shef.ac.uk/~hamish/



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