Probably offtopic - while I am reading about OpenCog community efforts in NLP, I am quite suspicious about statistical methods. I think that the only meaningful approach to the NLP ir the combinatory categorial grammars (Lambek calculus, Montague semantics) and this effort tries to translate natural language sentences into logical expressions - lambda calculus expressions. So - if there is connection between Schema as a language of lambda calculus, then CCGs are the way of translating NL sentences directly into Scheme structures. Besides CCGs approach uses white box approach and understanding for the semantics of natural language, these semantical knowledge can also be encoded as the Scheme/OpenCog structures and can be learned of enhanced by time.Of course, raw statistical approach in the end can give the same results, but structured approach can be more feasible. Besides - statistical approach yields results that are worth all or nothing. But CCG approach yields results that are improving step by step and such improving understanding reflects the human approach to the world and language - humans progresively learns language, its syntax and semantics. I we have the slightest doubts about existence of the perfect understanding of the language then we should also must have doubts about efficiency of the statistical approach.
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Ben Goertzel, PhD
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"I am God! I am nothing, I'm play, I am freedom, I am life. I am the
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Dear Linas, thanks for including me here. One crucial thing about language is that it manifestly “non-Cartesian”, and may as well be the total opposite in the spectrum of compositional structures, if one follows Lambek in the 2000s. The upshot of this is that it gives language a leading role in a spectrum of theories across many disciplines where these "anti-Cartesian” structures rule [ :) ]. I have written a couple of pedestrian/popular papers about this:
From quantum foundations via natural language meaning to a theory of everything
https://arxiv.org/abs/1602.07618
An alternative Gospel of structure: order, composition, processes
https://arxiv.org/abs/1307.4038
and my recent book with Aleks Kissinger, although in 1st order quantum theory, provides a framework on compositionally that applies equally well to language (as we explain in some advanced material sections):
http://www.cambridge.org/pqp
Thanks for the response. Some later date, I would like to talk more. Yes, its the non-Cartesian-ness of it all that I think I now know how to handle. Very briefly: in the original papers on link-grammar (1991-1993), they explained it by drawing pictures of jigsaw puzzle-pieces. One of the pop-sci reports of your work has a diagram of ... jigsaw puzzle pieces. I slapped my forehead. The current realization is that the "jigsaw pieces" are exactly the same thing as the local sections of a sheaf, and so I am busy data-mining those.
Interesting, need to understand more there...
Just for reference, there is down-to-earth, but very interesting and valuable article about generating CCG lexicon from Link Grammar lexicon https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00487053/document . So, now, as a fan of CCG, I will start to value efforts in link grammar area.
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