[ont.events] SUNY Buffalo Cognitive Science Colloquium--David McDonald

rapaport@sunybcs.UUCP (William J. Rapaport) (11/18/86)

                STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

                  GRADUATE GROUP IN COGNITIVE SCIENCE

                             DAVID McDONALD

             Department of Computer and Information Science
                 University of Massachusetts at Amherst

A COMPUTATIONAL THEORY OF NATURAL-LANGUAGE GENERATION: WHAT IT MEANS TO HAVE ONE

In the field of AI, the notational vehicles for our  theories  are  com-
puter  programs:   they  describe  processes, contexts, modularity, con-
straints, and resources with greater  facility  than  any  other  system
available  to  cognitive scientists.  Not every program can serve as the
statement of a theory, however.  Limitations on representational expres-
siveness and computational power must be prescribed; otherwise, a theory
will be able to claim nothing more than that the process  it  character-
izes  is Turing-computable (e.g., could be written in LISP), which would
seldom be a surprise.  At UMass, this limitation has been carried out by
implementing a special virtual machine--MUMBLE-86--that defines the pro-
cedural  interpretation  of   the   generator's   grammar   and   input-
specification    language,   and   defines   the   space   of   possible
realization/usage decisions:  when they can be made, what they can refer
to,  and  what  kinds  of things they can choose between.  The rationale
behind the design decisions that went into MUMBLE-86--in effect,  what I
take it that a computational theory of generation is a theory of--will be
the main point of the talk.  I will also describe where the state of the
art  in the field of generation is today and where it seems to be going,
and discuss how alternative formulations of the problem by other genera-
tion  projects  are  making  different predictions and tend to have less
explanatory force.

                        Monday, December 1, 1986
                               3:30 P.M.
                       Baldy 684, Amherst Campus

            Co-sponsored by:  Department of Computer Science

      Informal discussion at 8:00 P.M. at Stuart Shapiro's house,
                    112 Parkledge Drive, Snyder, NY.


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For further information, contact:


				William J. Rapaport
				Assistant Professor

Dept. of Computer Science, SUNY Buffalo, Buffalo, NY 14260

(716) 636-3193, 3180

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