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DTSTART:19700329T020000
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UID:/NewsandEvents/Archives/2015/newsitem/6889/19-
 May-2015-Special-CLS-workshop-on-Statistical-Model
 s-of-Grammaticality
DTSTAMP:20150510T000000
SUMMARY:Special CLS workshop on Statistical Models
  of Grammaticality
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20150519T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20150519T000000
LOCATION:Room F1.15, ILLC, Science Park 107, Amste
 rdam
DESCRIPTION:The CLS is happy to announce three tal
 ks about Statistical Models of Grammaticality stud
 ied within the SMOG project at King's College Lond
 on. SMOG is exploring the construction of an enric
 hed stochastic model that represents the syntactic
  knowledge that native speakers of English have of
  their language. We are experimenting with differe
 nt sorts of language models that contain a variety
  of parameters encoding properties of sentences an
 d probability distributions over corpora.    Speak
 ers:  Alex Clark: On his work on theoretical resul
 ts for grammar induction  Shalom Lappin: Experimen
 tal work on identifying gradience in speakers' rep
 resentation of syntactic knowledge  Jey Han Lau: E
 xperiments with unsupervised language models to pr
 edict speakers' syntactic acceptability judgements
     For more information and abstracts, see https:
 //www.illc.uva.nl/LaCo/CLS/
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:\n      <p>\n       T
 he CLS is happy to announce three talks about Stat
 istical Models of Grammaticality studied within th
 e SMOG project at King's College London. SMOG is e
 xploring the construction of an enriched stochasti
 c model that represents the syntactic knowledge th
 at native speakers of English have of their langua
 ge. We are experimenting with different sorts of l
 anguage models that contain a variety of parameter
 s encoding properties of sentences and probability
  distributions over corpora.\n      </p>\n      <p
 >\n    Speakers:<br/>\n        Alex Clark: On his 
 work on theoretical results for grammar induction<
 br/>\n        Shalom Lappin: Experimental work on 
 identifying gradience in speakers' representation 
 of syntactic knowledge<br/>\n        Jey Han Lau: 
 Experiments with unsupervised language models to p
 redict speakers' syntactic acceptability judgement
 s\n      </p>\n    \n      <p>\n        For more i
 nformation and abstracts,\n        see <a target="
 _blank" href="https://www.illc.uva.nl/LaCo/CLS/">h
 ttps://www.illc.uva.nl/LaCo/CLS/</a>\n      </p>\n
     
URL:/NewsandEvents/Archives/2015/newsitem/6889/19-
 May-2015-Special-CLS-workshop-on-Statistical-Model
 s-of-Grammaticality
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