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20 years of the Grammar Matrix: cross-linguistic hypothesis testing of increasingly complex interactions

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http://hdl.handle.net/2183/32736
Atribución 4.0 Internacional
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Atribución 4.0 Internacional
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  • Investigación (FFIL) [885]
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Title
20 years of the Grammar Matrix: cross-linguistic hypothesis testing of increasingly complex interactions
Author(s)
Zamaraeva, Olga
Curtis, Chris
Emerson, Guy
Fokkens, Antske
Goodman, Michael Wayne
Howell, Kristen
Trimble, T.J.
Bender, Emily M.
Date
2022-10-20
Citation
Zamaraeva, O., Curtis, C., Emerson, G., Fokkens, A., Goodman, M. ., Howell, K., Trimble, T., & Bender, E. M. (2022). 20 years of the Grammar Matrix: cross-linguistic hypothesis testing of increasingly complex interactions. Journal of Language Modelling, 10(1), 49–137. https://doi.org/10.15398/jlm.v10i1.292
Abstract
[Abstract] The Grammar Matrix project is a meta-grammar engineering framework expressed in Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar (HPSG) and Minimal Recursion Semantics (MRS). It automates grammar implementation and is thus a tool and a resource for linguistic hypothesis testing at scale. In this paper, we summarize how the Grammar Matrix grew in the last decade and describe how new additions to the system have made it possible to study interactions between analyses, both monolingually and cross-linguistically, at new levels of complexity.
Keywords
HPSG
Grammar engineering
Typology
Hypothesis testing
 
Editor version
https://doi.org/10.15398/jlm.v10i1.292
Rights
Atribución 4.0 Internacional
ISSN
2299-8470e
2299-856X
 

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