Linguistic Acceptability Assessment
Linguistic acceptability assessment is a natural-language-processing task that automatically estimates whether a sentence would be judged grammatically acceptable by a native speaker of the target language. Grounded in Chomsky's (1957) distinction between grammatical and ungrammatical utterances, the task was formalised as a neural benchmark by Warstadt, Singh and Bowman (2019) through the Corpus of Linguistic Acceptability (CoLA). It is used in language-learning research, linguistics studies, and quality auditing of natural-language-generation (NLG) systems.
Zdrojový záznam
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- Warstadt, A., Singh, A. & Bowman, S. (2019). Neural Network Acceptability Judgments. Transactions of the Association for Computational Linguistics, 7, 625–641. · DOI 10.1162/tacl_a_00290
- Chomsky, N. (1957). Syntactic Structures. Mouton, The Hague. · ISBN 978-9027933249
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Súvisiace metódy
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