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24th ACL 1986: New York, New York, USA
- Alan W. Biermann:

24th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics, Columbia University, New York, New York, USA, July 10-13, 1986. ACL 1986 - Ralph Grishman:

Tutorial Abstracts. 1 - Gary G. Hendrix:

Bringing Natural Language Processing to the microcomputer Market: the Story of Q&a. 2 - Mary P. Harper, Eugene Charniak:

Time and Tense in English. 3-9 - Martha Palmer, Deborah A. Dahl, Rebecca J. Schiffman, Lynette Hirschman, Marcia C. Linebarger, John Dowding:

Recovering Implicit Information. 10-19 - Bruce W. Ballard, Douglas E. Stumberger:

Semantic Acquisition In TELI: A Transportable, User-Customized Natural Language Processor. 20-29 - Eric Sven Ristad:

Computational Complexity of Current GPSG Theory. 30-39 - Eric Sven Ristad:

Defining Natural Language Grammars in GPSG. 40-44 - G. Edward Barton Jr.:

Constraint Propagation in Kimmo Systems. 45-52 - G. Edward Barton Jr.:

Computational Complexity in Two-Level Morphology. 53-59 - Michael B. Kashket:

Parsing a Free-Word Order Language: Warlpiri. 60-66 - David J. Weir, K. Vijay-Shanker, Aravind K. Joshi:

The Relationship Between Tree Adjoining Grammars And Head Grammarst. 67-74 - Joyce Friedman, Ramarathnam Venkatesan:

Categorial and Non-Categorial Languages. 75-77 - Donald W. Kosy:

Parsing Conjunctions Deterministically. 78-84 - Alexis Manaster-Ramer:

Copying in Natural Languages, Context-Freeness, and Queue Grammars. 85-89 - Marie M. Vaughan, David D. McDonald:

A Model of Revision in Natural Language Generation. 90-96 - Kathleen F. McCoy:

The ROMPER System: Responding to Object-Related Misconceptions using Perspective. 97-105 - Michael G. Dyer, Uri Zernik:

Encoding and Acquiring Meanings for Figurative Phrases. 106-111 - Judith A. Markowitz, Thomas Ahlswede, Martha W. Evens:

Semantically Significant Patterns in Dictionary Definitions. 112-119 - Roy J. Byrd, Judith L. Klavans, Mark Aronoff, Frank Anshen:

Computer Methods for Morphological Analysis. 120-127 - Gary Sabot:

Bulk Processing of Text on a Massively Parallel Computer. 128-135 - Julia Hirschberg, Janet B. Pierrehumbert:

The intonational Structuring of Discourse. 136-144 - Joan Bachenko, Eileen Fitzpatrick, C. E. Wright:

The Contribution of Parsing to prosodic phrasing in an Experimental Text-to-speech System. 145-155 - Kenneth Church

:
Morphoogicai Decomposition and Stress Assignment for Speech Synthesis. 156-164 - Yutaka Ohyama, Toshikazu Fukushima, Tomoki Shutoh, Masamichi Shutoh:

A Sentence Analysis Method for a Japanese Book Reading Machine for the Blind. 165-172 - Mary E. Beckman, Janet B. Pierrehumbert:

Japanese prosodic phrasing and intonation Synthesis. 173-180 - Mark Y. Liberman:

Questions about Connectionist Models of Natural Language. 181-183 - Terrence J. Sejnowski:

Language Learning in Massively-Parallel Networks. 184 - David L. Waltz:

Connectionist Models for Natural Language Processing Program. 185 - Amichai Kronfeld:

Donnellan's Distinction and a Computational Model of Reference. 186-191 - Brenda Fawcett, Graeme Hirst:

The detection and representation of ambiguities of intension and description. 192-199 - Megumi Kameyama:

A Property-Sharing Constraint in Centering. 200-206 - Martha E. Pollack:

A Model of Plan Inference that Distinguishes between the Beliefs of Actors and observers. 207-214 - Diane J. Litman:

Linguistic Coherence: a Plan-Based Alternative. 215-223 - Raymonde Guindon, Joyce Conner:

The Structure of User-Adviser Dialogues: Is there Method in their Madness? 224-230 - Jerry R. Hobbs, William Croft, Todd R. Davies

, Douglas Edwards, Kenneth I. Laws:
Commonsense Metaphysics and Lexical Semantics. 231-240 - David Stallard:

A Terminological Simplification Transformation for Natural Language Question-Answering Systems. 241-246 - Dale Miller, Gopalan Nadathur:

Some Uses of Higher-Order Logic in Computational Linguistics. 247-256 - Robert T. Kasper:

A Logical Semantics for Feature Structures. 257-266 - John S. White:

What Should Machine Translation Be? 267 - Martin Kay:

Machine Translation will not Work. 268 - Margaret King:

Machine Translation already does Work. 269-270

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