{ "paper_id": "J88-1001", "header": { "generated_with": "S2ORC 1.0.0", "date_generated": "2023-01-19T02:56:41.635605Z" }, "title": "", "authors": [ { "first": "Gerald", "middle": [], "last": "Gazdar", "suffix": "", "affiliation": { "laboratory": "", "institution": "University of Sussex", "location": { "postCode": "BN1 9QN", "settlement": "Brighton", "country": "U.K" } }, "email": "" }, { "first": "Geoffrey", "middle": [ "K" ], "last": "Pullum", "suffix": "", "affiliation": { "laboratory": "", "institution": "University of California", "location": { "addrLine": "Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz", "postCode": "95064", "region": "California", "country": "USA" } }, "email": "" }, { "first": "Robert", "middle": [], "last": "Carpenter", "suffix": "", "affiliation": { "laboratory": "", "institution": "University of Edinburgh", "location": { "postCode": "EH8 9LW", "settlement": "Edinburgh", "country": "U.K" } }, "email": "" }, { "first": "Ewan", "middle": [], "last": "Klein", "suffix": "", "affiliation": { "laboratory": "", "institution": "University of Edinburgh", "location": { "postCode": "EH8 9LW", "settlement": "Edinburgh", "country": "U.K" } }, "email": "" }, { "first": "Thomas", "middle": [ "E" ], "last": "Hukari", "suffix": "", "affiliation": { "laboratory": "", "institution": "University of Victoria", "location": { "postCode": "V8W 2Y2", "settlement": "Victoria", "region": "B.C", "country": "Canada" } }, "email": "" }, { "first": "Robert", "middle": [ "D" ], "last": "Levine", "suffix": "", "affiliation": { "laboratory": "", "institution": "University of British Columbia", "location": { "postCode": "V6T lW5", "settlement": "Vancouver", "region": "B.C", "country": "Canada" } }, "email": "" } ], "year": "", "venue": null, "identifiers": {}, "abstract": "This paper outlines a simple and general notion of syntactic category on a metatheoretical level, independent of the notations and substantive claims of any particular grammatical framework. We define a class of formal objects called \"category structures\" where each such object provides a constructive definition for a space of syntactic categories. A unification operation and subsumption and identity relations are defined for arbitrary syntactic categories. In addition, a formal language for the statement of constraints on categories is provided. By combining a category structure with a set of constraints, we show that one can define the category systems of several well-known grammatical frameworks: phrase structure grammar, tagmemics, augmented phrase structure grammar, relational grammar, transformational grammar, generalized phrase structure grammar, systemic grammar, categorial grammar, and indexed grammar. The problem of checking a category for conformity to constraints is shown to be solvable in linear time. This work provides in effect a unitary class of data structures for the representation of syntactic categories in a range of diverse grammatical frameworks. Using such data structures should make it possible for various pseudo-issues in natural language processing research to be avoided. We conclude by examining the questions posed by set-valued features and sharing of values between distinct feature specifications, both of which fall outside the scope of the formal system developed in this paper. The notion syntactic category is a central one in most grammatical frameworks. As Karttunen and Zwicky (1985) observe, traditional \"parsing\" as taught for languages like Latin involved little more than supplying a detailed description of the grammatical category of each word in the sentence to be parsed. Phrase structure grammars are entirely concerned with assigning terminal strings to categories and determining dominance and precedence between constituents on the basis of their categories. In a classical transformational grammar (TG), the objects transformations manipulate are primarily strings of syntactic categories (and, to a lesser extent, of terminal symbols). This is just as true of recent TG work. Although the use of syntactic categories is not a logical prerequisite of generative grammar (see Levy and Joshi (1978)), no linguistic approach known to us dispenses with them altogether. In view of this, it is perhaps surprising that linguists have not attempted to explicate the concept \"syntactic category\" in any gen", "pdf_parse": { "paper_id": "J88-1001", "_pdf_hash": "", "abstract": [ { "text": "This paper outlines a simple and general notion of syntactic category on a metatheoretical level, independent of the notations and substantive claims of any particular grammatical framework. We define a class of formal objects called \"category structures\" where each such object provides a constructive definition for a space of syntactic categories. A unification operation and subsumption and identity relations are defined for arbitrary syntactic categories. In addition, a formal language for the statement of constraints on categories is provided. By combining a category structure with a set of constraints, we show that one can define the category systems of several well-known grammatical frameworks: phrase structure grammar, tagmemics, augmented phrase structure grammar, relational grammar, transformational grammar, generalized phrase structure grammar, systemic grammar, categorial grammar, and indexed grammar. The problem of checking a category for conformity to constraints is shown to be solvable in linear time. This work provides in effect a unitary class of data structures for the representation of syntactic categories in a range of diverse grammatical frameworks. Using such data structures should make it possible for various pseudo-issues in natural language processing research to be avoided. We conclude by examining the questions posed by set-valued features and sharing of values between distinct feature specifications, both of which fall outside the scope of the formal system developed in this paper. The notion syntactic category is a central one in most grammatical frameworks. As Karttunen and Zwicky (1985) observe, traditional \"parsing\" as taught for languages like Latin involved little more than supplying a detailed description of the grammatical category of each word in the sentence to be parsed. Phrase structure grammars are entirely concerned with assigning terminal strings to categories and determining dominance and precedence between constituents on the basis of their categories. In a classical transformational grammar (TG), the objects transformations manipulate are primarily strings of syntactic categories (and, to a lesser extent, of terminal symbols). This is just as true of recent TG work. Although the use of syntactic categories is not a logical prerequisite of generative grammar (see Levy and Joshi (1978)), no linguistic approach known to us dispenses with them altogether. In view of this, it is perhaps surprising that linguists have not attempted to explicate the concept \"syntactic category\" in any gen", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "Abstract", "sec_num": null } ], "body_text": [ { "text": "eral way, i.e., independently of particular systems of notation and the associated substantive assumptions about grammar.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "", "sec_num": null }, { "text": "In this paper we offer an explicit metatheoretical framework in which a notion of \"syntactic category\" receives a precise definition. The framework is intended to facilitate analysis and comparison of the underlying concepts of different theories, freed from the notational and sociological baggage that sometimes encumbers the original presentations in the literature. Viewed from the standpoint of implementation, it can be regarded as providing a unitary data structure for categories that can be used in the implementation of a number of superficially different grammatical frameworks.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "", "sec_num": null }, { "text": "We begin by defining in section 1 a space of categories broad enough to encompass the objects employed as syntactic categories in a range of diverse types of generative grammar. Then, in section 2, we present the syntax and semantics for L c, a formal language for defining constraints on categories. In the succeeding section we provide illustrative definitions of the grammatical categories used in a number of frameworks. We cover simple phrase structure grammar in section 3.1; tagmemics in section 3.2; Harman's (1963) augmented phrase structure grammar in section 3.3; relational grammar and arc pair grammar in section 3.4; X syntax, TG, and the government-binding (GB) framework in section 3.5; generalized phrase structure grammar (GPSG) in section 3.6; systemic grammar in section 3.7; categorial grammar in section 3.8; and Aho's (1968) indexed grammar in section 3.9. We then go on to consider some relevant computational complexity matters (section 4). Finally, we discuss two issues that do not arise in any of these approaches, and which fall outside the scope of the simple theory that we present, namely the use of sets as values of features (section 5) and values shared between distinct feature specifications (section 6). These issues are important in the context of the category systems employed in functional unification grammar (FUG), lexical functional grammar (LFG), and the PATR II grammar formalism.", "cite_spans": [ { "start": 508, "end": 523, "text": "Harman's (1963)", "ref_id": "BIBREF20" }, { "start": 835, "end": 847, "text": "Aho's (1968)", "ref_id": "BIBREF0" } ], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "", "sec_num": null }, { "text": "Our goal in this paper is not an empirical one, but rather one which is analogous to that of Montague's \"Universal Grammar\" (1970) (see Halvorsen and Ladusaw (1977) for a useful introduction) which attempts to give a general definition of the notion \"possible language\" in terms applicable to, but not limited to, the study of human languages. We have the much more modest goal of characterizing one rather simple and general notion of \"possible syntactic category\", and of exploring the range of linguistic approaches that it will generalize to, its formal properties, and its limitations. As will become evident below, our exercise is complementary in certain respects to that of Pereira and Shieber (1984) and Shieber (1987) and to recent work of Rounds and his associates on the development of a logic for the description of the notions of syntactic category that are embodied in functional unification grammar and PATR II (see Kasper and Rounds (1986) , Moshier and Rounds (1987) , Rounds and Kasper (1986) ).", "cite_spans": [ { "start": 93, "end": 130, "text": "Montague's \"Universal Grammar\" (1970)", "ref_id": null }, { "start": 136, "end": 164, "text": "Halvorsen and Ladusaw (1977)", "ref_id": null }, { "start": 682, "end": 708, "text": "Pereira and Shieber (1984)", "ref_id": "BIBREF46" }, { "start": 713, "end": 727, "text": "Shieber (1987)", "ref_id": "BIBREF59" }, { "start": 932, "end": 956, "text": "Kasper and Rounds (1986)", "ref_id": "BIBREF33" }, { "start": 959, "end": 984, "text": "Moshier and Rounds (1987)", "ref_id": "BIBREF43" }, { "start": 987, "end": 1011, "text": "Rounds and Kasper (1986)", "ref_id": "BIBREF54" } ], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "", "sec_num": null }, { "text": "We do not concern ourselves with the appearance or representational details of a given theory of categories (or any of the other aspects of the linguistic framework in question, e.g., its rule system), but only with its underlying semantics--the issue of what set-theoretic (or other nonlinguistic) objects provide categories with their interpretation. We are content with being able to exhibit an isomorphism between one of the theories of categories permitted by our framework and the concrete example we are considering; we need not demonstrate identity. Hence we have deliberately refrained from specifying a formal language for representing categories and features. To the extent that we need to produce exemplificatory features or categories for inspection, we may use the conventional notation of the approach in question, or the ordinary notations of set theory, or an informal labeled graph notation introduced below, but we do not offer a representational formalism for categories that has a significance of its own.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "", "sec_num": null }, { "text": "In the framework we provide, it is possible to define the category systems of a wide variety of apparently very different approaches to natural language syntax simply by defining two primitive typing functions, and by varying the constraints stated on the categories that they induce. The exercise of expressing the content of various specific linguistic approaches in such terms immediately calls attention to certain interesting formal issues. For example, we reconstruct below the notion of a list-valued (or stack-valued) feature in terms of category-valued features, which automatically allows operations defined on categories such as unification to apply to lists without special redefinition.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "", "sec_num": null }, { "text": "An interesting fact that emerges from the view taken here is that on the matter of syntactic categories, there is somewhat more commonality among the diverse approaches currently being pursued than there appears to be when those approaches are viewed in the formalisms used by their practitioners. The various syntactic frameworks that we examine below can be seen to share a great deal of their underlying substantive claims about the information content of the category label of a constituent. Our explication of these underlying commonalities may make somewhat easier the task of the computational linguist attempting to implement a system on the basis of some grammatical framework, or attempting to decide which approach to implement in the first place.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "", "sec_num": null }, { "text": "In order to prepare for some of the definitions that follow, we will briefly and informally sketch some of our assumptions about features and categories and the terminology we shall use for talking about them. A category is a set of feature specifieations meeting certain conditions to be defined below. A feature specification is an attribute-value pair (f, v) where the attributef(the feature) is atomic (i.e., given by some finite list, and regarded as unanalyzable) and the value v is either atomic or complex. Here we shall assume just one type of complex value, namely a category (but see below in section 5).", "cite_spans": [ { "start": 355, "end": 361, "text": "(f, v)", "ref_id": null } ], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "", "sec_num": null }, { "text": "An example of an atom-valued feature specification would be (SINGULAR,+) (which many grammarians would write as [+SINGULAR] ); intuitively, it might mark singular number (though, of course, the interpretation it actually has depends on the role it plays in the grammar). An example of a complex feature specification, with a category as the value, would be (AGREEMENT, {(SINGULAR, +), (GENDER, FEM), (PERSON, 3)}); intuitively, it might be used to convey that the value of the AGREEMENT feature is a category representing the combination of singular number, feminine gender, and third person. In the following sections, we will always use SMALL CAPI-TALS for feature names, and we will generally replace \"-\" and \"+\", which are standard usage in the linguistic literature for the atomic values of a binary feature, by 0 and 1 respectively.", "cite_spans": [ { "start": 112, "end": 123, "text": "[+SINGULAR]", "ref_id": null } ], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "", "sec_num": null }, { "text": "As we have said, a category is a set of feature specifications meeting certain conditions. We will now specify these. We do not require that every feature name be represented in each category, but we do require that each occurrence of a feature be paired with exactly one value in any set of specifications; thus {(SINGULAR,+>, (SINGULAR,-->} could not be a category. Hence a category can be modeled as a partial function C:F--> V, where F is a set of features and V is the set of values. An equivalent alternative would be to treat categories as total functions into a range that includes an element \u00b1 that can stand as the value where the corresponding partial functions would fail to assign a value. Note that we use the term 'range' here, and subsequently, to refer to a set that includes all the values that a partial function or family of partial functions might take given appropriate domain elements, rather than just the set of values that it does take when we fix a particular domain for a function.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "", "sec_num": null }, { "text": "It may be helpful to think of a category as having the structure of an unordered tree, and we will introduce a type of diagram below which exhibits this structure overtly. Often, however, the idea of categories as partial functions will be crucial, so it should be kept in mind throughout.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "", "sec_num": null }, { "text": "Since the set V of values may include categories, the definition of the entire set of categories has to be given recursively. Moreover, it has to allow for the possibility that not all values are compatible with all features. Thus, for example, in a given feature system, (GENDER, 0) and (PERSON, plural) might be coherent objects but mnemonically perverse, whereas in another feature system, they might simply be ill-formed. We shall show how these issues can be resolved in the coming sections. We will not, however, give a constructive definition of the set of categories for each grammatical framework we consider. Instead, given our comparative and metatheoretical goals, it turns out to be more convenient to define a category system as a pair (~, C> where ~ is a category structure, which defines a set of potential categories (see section 8), and C is a set of constraints expressed in L c, a language for which the category structure defines the models (see section 9). The actual categories in the system are then to be construed as that subset of the potential categories defined in ~, each member of which satisfies every constraint listed in C.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "", "sec_num": null }, { "text": "In this section we define the notion of a category structure, which is basically a choice of primitives: a list of features, and a range of possible values for each. Here and throughout the paper we will frequently use \"2\" to denote the set {0, l} (the context will make it clear when \"2\" represents an integer and when it represents a set). We will write A B for the set of total functions from B into A,A (m for the set of partial functions from B into A, @(A) for the power set of A,IAI for the cardinality of A, and Aft) for the domain of a (partial) function f (iff is a partial function than A(f) is the set of items to which f assigns a value).", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "DEFINING CATEGORY STRUCTURES", "sec_num": "1" }, { "text": "A category structure E is a quadruple (F, A, r, p) where F is a finite set of features, A is a finite set of atoms, r is a function in 2 F, and p is a function from {flW.D = 0} into ~(A). The function r partitions F into two sets: the set of type 0 features F \u00b0 = {fir(f) = 0}, and the set of type 1 features F l = {fir(f) = 1}. We will write r as r 0 when F = F \u00b0. Type 0 features take atomic values and type 1 features take categories as values. The function p assigns a range of atomic values to each feature of type 0.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "DEFINING CATEGORY STRUCTURES", "sec_num": "1" }, { "text": "The set of categories K is recursively defined in terms of (F, A, r, p), in a way very similar to that used in Pollard (1984, p. 299ff) , though Pollard's assumptions differ on some important details. A relatively informal presentation will suffice here. We will refer to the set of partial functions from F \u00b0 into A that are consistent with p as the type 0 categories. We first define the set of pure type 0 categories of ~ as those containing only type 0 feature specifications. Then we build up K via a series of approximations we will refer to as levels, finally taking the infinite union of all the levels to obtain K itself:", "cite_spans": [ { "start": 111, "end": 135, "text": "Pollard (1984, p. 299ff)", "ref_id": null } ], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "DEFINING CATEGORY STRUCTURES", "sec_num": "1" }, { "text": "(1) a. O is a category at level 0 b. If a is a type 0 category and fl is a category containing only type 1 features whose values are categories at level n, then a U fl is a category at level n + 1. c. K is the set of all categories at all levels n -> 0.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "DEFINING CATEGORY STRUCTURES", "sec_num": "1" }, { "text": "Given the way K is built up, the induction step in (Ib) being restricted to union of finite partial functions, it should be clear that K is a recursive set.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "DEFINING CATEGORY STRUCTURES", "sec_num": "1" }, { "text": "We can define certain relations and operations on the space K of possible categories. Thus, we can give a constructive definition for unification (symbolized U) as a binary operation on categories.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "DEFINING CATEGORY STRUCTURES", "sec_num": "1" }, { "text": "(2) Definition:", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "DEFINING CATEGORY STRUCTURES", "sec_num": "1" }, { "text": "unification (i) if (f, v) E a but/300 is undefined, then (f, v) E aU/3; (ii) if (f, v) E/3 but a(f) is undefined, then (f, v) E ~U/3; (iii) if (f, v;", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "DEFINING CATEGORY STRUCTURES", "sec_num": "1" }, { "text": ") e a and (f, b) e /3 and ~-(]) = 1, then if vi U b is undefined, a U/3 is also undefined, else (f, v i U vj) @ a U/3; (iv) if (f, vi) E a and (f, 5) E /3 and T(j') = 0, then if vi = vj, (f, vi) E /3 U/3, else a U/3 is undefined. (v) nothing else is in a U/3. We can then use unification to define the subsumes relation between categories (where 'subsumes' means 'is more general/underspecified than', or 'is extended by'). We symbolize 'subsumes' with 'E_', and define it as follows.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "DEFINING CATEGORY STRUCTURES", "sec_num": "1" }, { "text": "(3) Definition: subsumption o~ subsumes/3 (a E_/3) if and only if/3 = a U/3.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "DEFINING CATEGORY STRUCTURES", "sec_num": "1" }, { "text": "Thus a subsumes/3 if and only if/3 is the unification of a and/3. When a subsumes/3 then we may refer to/3 as an extension of a. If a U/3 is undefined, then/3 = a U/3 fails, and a does not subsume/3. From this it follows that, if a and/3 are categories, then a =/3 if and only if a E_/3 and/3 E_ a. The following theorem is provable by induction on category levels. ", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "DEFINING CATEGORY STRUCTURES", "sec_num": "1" }, { "text": "We now provide an interpreted formal language, L C, for expressing specific constraints on categories. Constraints are statements that can be true or false of a category. By requiring satisfaction of the constraint, a constraint can be used to delimit a subspace within the set K induced by a given category structure E, to serve as the grammatical categories for a particular type of grammar. It should be noted that our goals in formulating L c are slightly different from those of Rounds and his associates: Lc is a language for formulating constraints on well-formed categories, not a language whose expressions are intended for use in place of categories. To put it rather crudely, our language is for category definition whereas Rounds' is (in part) for category manipulation. However, the languages look rather similar syntactically, and where they overlap, the semantics is essentially the same.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "THE CONSTRAINT LANGUAGE L c", "sec_num": "2" }, { "text": "We define two types of constraint: basic and complex. If f is an element of F, and a is an element of A, then there are just two distinct types of well-formed basic constraint:", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "THE CONSTRAINT LANGUAGE L c", "sec_num": "2" }, { "text": "(5) a. f b. 32a (where ~-(f) = 0)", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "THE CONSTRAINT LANGUAGE L c", "sec_num": "2" }, { "text": "Informally, (5a) constrains a category to contain some specification for the feature f; thus, the constraint \"BAR\" says that every syntactic category satisfying it has as one of its elements a pair (BAR, n). This does not entail that every value of every category-valued feature contained in the category must contain BAR; a basic constraint applies to the \"top level\" of the tree-like structure of a category. Likewise, (5b) says of a category satisfying it that it has as one of its elements the pair (f, a). Note that the only thing a basic constraint can require of a type 0 feature beyond saying that it must be present (defined) is that it have a particular atomic value, and that a basic constraint cannot require anything of a type 1 feature at all beyond demanding its presence.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "THE CONSTRAINT LANGUAGE L c", "sec_num": "2" }, { "text": "Turning to complex constraints, we now continue the list (5), giving the syntax for each type of complex constraint together with an informal indication of its semantics. Assume thatfis an element of F 1, and 05 and are themselves well-formed basic or complex constraints, and that we are considering the interpretation of the constraints with respect to some fixed category structure Y and some category a. 5 Constraints of the forms (5a) through (5h) are fairly straightforward, but constraints like those shown in (5i) and (5j) need a little more discussion. They introduce modality into our language. Their purpose is to allow for recursive constraints to be imposed on successively embedded layers of category values. As indicated, a category a satisfies r-]05 provided that, firstly, a satisfies 05 and secondly, whenever a assigns a category/3 to a type 1 feature f, /3 satisfies D05. This may appear to introduce a circularity, but it does not: categories are finite, and within any category there will be a level so deeply embedded in the tree structure that there are no more category values within it; at that point [~05 is true if 05 is, thus ending the recursion.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "THE CONSTRAINT LANGUAGE L c", "sec_num": "2" }, { "text": "Our choice of notation in (5i) is quite deliberate: in effect, constraints of the form (50 express universal quantification over embedded accessible' categories in the way that the familiar necessity operator [] of modal logic enforces universal quantification over accessible worlds in the standard semantics. The possibility operator in (5j) is, as usual, the dual of the necessity operator: O 4, says of a category a satisfying it that either a satisfies tO, or there exists a category-value/3 assigned to a type 1 featurefby a such that/3 satisfies <>tO.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "THE CONSTRAINT LANGUAGE L c", "sec_num": "2" }, { "text": "As a simple example of the sort of work a complex constraint in Lc might do in a grammatical theory, consider the constraint that is known as the \"Case filter\" in recent TG (see Chomsky 1980, p. 25) . Stated informally as \"*N, where N has no Case\", the constraint appears to require every occurrence of the feature complex characterizing the category N, i.e., every occurrence of [+N, -V], to co-occur with a feature called \"Case\". The constraint can be stated in", "cite_spans": [ { "start": 178, "end": 198, "text": "Chomsky 1980, p. 25)", "ref_id": null } ], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "THE CONSTRAINT LANGUAGE L c", "sec_num": "2" }, { "text": "Lc as (6). (6) [](((N: I) A (v: 0)) ~ CASE)", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "THE CONSTRAINT LANGUAGE L c", "sec_num": "2" }, { "text": "Here and from now on, we use parentheses in the obvious way wherever it is necessary prevent ambiguity in the statement of constraints.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "THE CONSTRAINT LANGUAGE L c", "sec_num": "2" }, { "text": "The account of L c given thus far will suffice for a reading of this paper, but those readers who would like to see the semantics given more formally may turn to the appendix. To recapitulate, a theory of categories \u00ae in our sense is a pair (E, C), where I\u00a3 is a category structure and C is a set of sentences of Lo The set of categories determined by \u00ae is the maximal subset Kc of K determined by E such that each member of K c satisfies every member of C.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "THE CONSTRAINT LANGUAGE L c", "sec_num": "2" }, { "text": "We will now illustrate the application of the apparatus developed thus far by reconstructing the category systems used in a number of well-known grammatical frameworks that linguists have developed, most of them frameworks that have been used in natural language processing systems at one time or another.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "ILLUSTRATIVE APPLICATIONS", "sec_num": "3" }, { "text": "The case of simple phrase structure grammar is trivial, but will serve as an introduction to the form of later sections, and as a straightforward example of the use of a type 0 feature.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "SIMPLE PHRASE STRUCTURE GRAMMAR", "sec_num": "3.1" }, { "text": "The set of categories used in a simple phrase structure grammar is just some finite set of atomic categories {al ..... a,}, for example, {S, NP, VP, Det, N, V}. So we fix values for F, A, z, and p as in (7):", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "SIMPLE PHRASE STRUCTURE GRAMMAR", "sec_num": "3.1" }, { "text": "(7) a. F = {LABEL} b. A = {a 1 ..... a,} c. ~' o d. p = {} We then add the following:", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "CATEGORIAL GRAMMAR", "sec_num": "3.8" }, { "text": "(31) a. [-](DOMAIN <--> --l LABEL) b. [-](DOMAIN <--> RANGE)", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "CATEGORIAL GRAMMAR", "sec_num": "3.8" }, { "text": "We can now represent any category allowed in the simple form of categorial grammar considered so far. For example, the category (StNP)I(SINP) can be represented as shown graphically in (32). To show formally that we have captured the content of the category system of categorial grammar, we can exhibit a bijection between the categorial grammar categories and the admissible categories induced by F, A, and the constraints defined above. We define a mapping 0 between the categorial grammar categories and the admissible categories with respect to (31a) and (31b), as follows:", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "CATEGORIAL GRAMMAR", "sec_num": "3.8" }, { "text": "(33) a. O(a i) = } where a and/3 are categories.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "CATEGORIAL GRAMMAR", "sec_num": "3.8" }, { "text": "A simple structural induction argument suffices to show that 0 is indeed bijective. The smallest category will be of the type ai, and corresponds to {}.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "CATEGORIAL GRAMMAR", "sec_num": "3.8" }, { "text": "Each further step replaces a i or aj by a non-basic category and will clearly yield a unique result. It can be seen immediately that the mapping 0 has an inverse. The categories defined thus far are non-directional, in the sense that a complex category can combine with an argument either to its left or its right. However, most definitions assume directional categories Bach (1984) . This further specification can be easily incorporated by introducing a new feature name DIRECTION which takes values in 2. We then add a constraint that categories taking values for DOMAIN also take a value for DIRECTION, thus determining the directionality of the category. This translation function is again a bijection, for the same reasons as before. Clearly we could employ an analogous move to subsume the od/3 vs. od//3 category distinction employed in Montague (1973) . In some recent work on categorial grammar, it makes sense to think of expressions being assigned to infinite sets of categories rather than to a single category, but we will not pursue the implications of such a move here (see van Benthem (1986c) for relevant discussion).", "cite_spans": [ { "start": 371, "end": 382, "text": "Bach (1984)", "ref_id": "BIBREF3" }, { "start": 845, "end": 860, "text": "Montague (1973)", "ref_id": "BIBREF42" } ], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "CATEGORIAL GRAMMAR", "sec_num": "3.8" }, { "text": "Indexed grammars are a generalization of phrase structure grammars due originally to Aho (1968) . Like categorial grammar and some of the other frameworks previously mentioned, it uses an infinite category set. In the formulation presented in Gazdar (1985) , an indexed grammar category consists of an atomic label and a possibly empty list (or stack) of atomic indices drawn from a finite set.", "cite_spans": [ { "start": 85, "end": 95, "text": "Aho (1968)", "ref_id": "BIBREF0" }, { "start": 243, "end": 256, "text": "Gazdar (1985)", "ref_id": "BIBREF13" } ], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "INDEXED GRAMMAR", "sec_num": "3.9" }, { "text": "There is a familiar technique for encoding lists or stacks in a notation which relies on the fact that lists can be decomposed into an initial element and the residual list (see, for example, Shieber (1984) ). Thus, we add new elements INDEX and LIST to the set F: The first requires that at the top level, an indexed category has a label and a list of indices. The second disallows INDEX from co-occurring with LABEL, enforcing the constraint recursively downward. The third requires that if LIST is defined anywhere, then INDEX is defined in its value. And the last, also enforced recursively downward, requires that if INDEX has the value 0, LIST is not defined (so the end of the list of indices is unambiguously flagged by INDEX having the value 0). A category bearing an \"empty\" list of indices is thus one whose value for LIST is {(INDEX, 0)}. An example of a category allowed by these constraints is shown in (40).", "cite_spans": [ { "start": 192, "end": 206, "text": "Shieber (1984)", "ref_id": "BIBREF57" } ], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "INDEXED GRAMMAR", "sec_num": "3.9" }, { "text": "defined, since the distinction between atomic indices and indices taken from a finite set of categories has no language-theoretic implications. Given the representability of list-valued features as category-valued features in the present framework, the definitions of subsumption and unification automatically apply to lists without the need for any redefinition. If the empty category is used as the end marker for lists then two lists of different lengths will unify if one is a prefix of the other. Depending upon the linguistic interpretation of lists, this may or may not be what one wants. In our illustration, we use an atomic end marker that will block prefix unification.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "INDEXED GRAMMAR", "sec_num": "3.9" }, { "text": "The checking problem for categories is the problem of determining whether a category is legal given a fixed set of constraints, or more precisely, of determining for an arbitrary category oz and a fixed formula 4' of L c whether o~ satisfies 4'. It is a special case of the problem of determining whether some arbitrary model satisfies some fixed formula of a logic.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "COMPUTATIONAL COMPLEXITY OF CATEGORY CHECKING 4", "sec_num": "4" }, { "text": "Theorem. The checking problem for categories is solvable in linear time. Proof. Assuming a category structure E = for f E F ~ and n -0 corresponds to a node labelled f with the first elements of oq through o-k as its daugh- Indexed grammar as originally formalized by Aho uses lists of atomic indices as part of the composition of categories. It is also possible in the framework we have defined to allow features to have lists of categories as their values. This is in fact proposed in the literature by Shieber (1984) and Pollard (1985) . To extend an indexed grammar to permit GKPS-style categories in place of atomic indices, one can simply make INDEX a type 1 feature, add the GKPS category structure and constraints to the indexed grammar category structure and constraints, and then exempt LIST (but, crucially, not INDEX) from being subject to the constraint schema in (25). The resultant type of grammar, assuming that the limitations on rules in indexed grammars are maintained, is equivalent to indexed grammar as originally LeT(s). Let T be such a tree, and let 4' be a fixed formula of L c. We check T for satisfaction of 4' by annotating each node of T with the complete list of all subexpressions of 4', and working from the frontier to the root recording at each node which subexpressions are satisfied by the subtree rooted there. At each point the checking is local: only the current node and its daughters (if any) need be examined. Even for a subformula like [-q\u00a2, all that must be verified at a node q as we work up the tree is that q, is satisfied at q and 7q\u00a2 is recorded as satisfied at each daughter node. The conclusion of the procedure will be to determine whether or not 4' itself is true at the root of T, and thus whether T is well-formed. If 4' has s subformul~e and T has n nodes, the time taken is bounded by sn (the number of steps required if every subformula is evaluated at every node), and thus linear in n, the size of the input. \u2022 Of somewhat less interest than the checking problem is the universal checking problem, that of determining for an arbitrary input pair (tk, a), ~b a formula and a a category, whether a satisfies 4). The difference is that here ~b is not held constant; the task is analogous not to checking the legality of a category within a selected grammatical framework, but rather to a kind of framework-design oversight role, switching frameworks with every input and evaluating the given category relative to the proffered constraint. We note, however, that the universal checking problem only calls for, at worst, quadratic time. To see this, simply note that we can use the algorithm sketched above, and take account of s as well as n as part of the size of the input. The worst case is where s and n contribute about equally to the size of the product sn, i.e., where s -~ n. Then sn -~ ((s + n)/2) 2 = (s + n)2/4, which varies with the square of the input size s + n.", "cite_spans": [ { "start": 851, "end": 865, "text": "Shieber (1984)", "ref_id": "BIBREF57" }, { "start": 870, "end": 884, "text": "Pollard (1985)", "ref_id": "BIBREF50" } ], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "COMPUTATIONAL COMPLEXITY OF CATEGORY CHECKING 4", "sec_num": "4" }, { "text": "For some special cases, both the checking problem and the universal checking problem are of course much easier. For example, if only type 0 features are permitted, checking is decidable in real time by a simple inspection of the finite number of (f, a) pairs, regardless of whether ~b is part of the input or not.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "COMPUTATIONAL COMPLEXITY OF CATEGORY CHECKING 4", "sec_num": "4" }, { "text": "Note that the much harder satisfiability problem, that of determining for an arbitrary formula ~b whether there exists a category a that satisfies it, is of even less interest in the present context. When a grammatical framework intended for practical use is devised, the constraints on its category system are formulated to delimit a particular set of categories already well understood and exemplified. There is no practical interest in questions about arbitrary formulae of L c for which no one has ever considered what a satisfying category would be like.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "COMPUTATIONAL COMPLEXITY OF CATEGORY CHECKING 4", "sec_num": "4" }, { "text": "We would expect the satisfiability problem for Lc to be PSPACE-complete, like the satisfiability problem for most modal logics. Ristad (1986, p. 33-4) proves a PSPACE-hardness result for what he calls \"GPSG Category-Membership\", specifically with respect to the GKPS framework, and this can immediately be seen to be extendable to the satisfiability result for L c (as mentioned in footnote 3, L c is in effect a language for the statement of feature cooccurrence restrictions, and can be used in the same way that Ristad uses the GKPS FCR formalism). The problem he considers, despite the misleading name he gives it, is the analog of satisfiability, not of checking; it asks whether there exists an extension of a given category that satisfies a given set of FCRs, and since the given category might be O, this is equivalent to satisfiability. Satisfiability is NP-complete even for simple propositional logic, so as soon as it is appreciated that a language for stating constraints on categories is in effect a logic with categories as its models, the complexity of satisfiability for category constraints comes as no surprise. Checking of GKPS categories, on the other hand, which Ristad does not consider, can be done very fast, as a corollary of the theorem above.", "cite_spans": [ { "start": 128, "end": 150, "text": "Ristad (1986, p. 33-4)", "ref_id": null } ], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "COMPUTATIONAL COMPLEXITY OF CATEGORY CHECKING 4", "sec_num": "4" }, { "text": "All the syntactic approaches that we have considered so far distinguish syntactic categories from structural description of expressions in a fairly transparent fashion. In FUG Kay (1979 Kay ( , 1985 , LFG Kaplan and Bresnan (1982) , and work by Shieber and others on PATR II Shieber (1984) , this traditional distinction disappears almost entirely. Thus, in LFG, syntactic categories and the structural descriptions known as f-structures are exactly the same kind of object. In FUG, not only is there no formal distinction between categories and structural descriptions, but even the distinction between structural descriptions and grammars disappears. At first sight, LFG f-structures seem likely to be the trivial case of a set of categories observing no constraints on admissibility at all. We simply take F to be the LFG set of f-structure attribute names, and A to be the LFG set of atomic f-structure values (the \"simple symbols\" and \"semantic forms\"). So, following this reasoning, the set of LFG f-structures would be just K, modulo the appropriate typing. However, this is not the case, for reasons that will emerge below.", "cite_spans": [ { "start": 176, "end": 185, "text": "Kay (1979", "ref_id": "BIBREF34" }, { "start": 186, "end": 198, "text": "Kay ( , 1985", "ref_id": "BIBREF35" }, { "start": 205, "end": 230, "text": "Kaplan and Bresnan (1982)", "ref_id": "BIBREF30" }, { "start": 275, "end": 289, "text": "Shieber (1984)", "ref_id": "BIBREF57" } ], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "SETS AS VALUES", "sec_num": "5" }, { "text": "The first problem we consider is that at least two of the frameworks just mentioned permit sets as feature values. In one sense we already permit sets as values since type 1 features have categories as their values, and categories are sets. Categories are a rather special kind of set, however, namely partial function from features to values. Suppose we merely wanted to have a model for a set of atoms. Then, as we saw in our discussion of APG, we can model such a set by constructing the set's characteristic function. But modelling a set that way, whilst perfectly adequate for APG categories, has a consequence that may not always be acceptable: two sets on the same domain will unify just in case they are exactly the same set. Given certain quite natural interpretations of a feature system making use of sets, this may not be what we want.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "SETS AS VALUES", "sec_num": "5" }, { "text": "An alternative strategy then, and one which is also consistent with our framework, is to model sets as partial functions into a single value range (as opposed to total functions into a two value range). For example, the subset of the authors of this paper with British addresses could be represented as a partial function on the domain {Gazdar, Pullum, Carpenter, Klein, Hukari, Levine}, namely the function {(Carpenter, 1), (Gazdar, 1) , (Klein, 1),} instead of the following total (characteristic) function on the same domain: {(Carpenter, 1), (Gazdar, 1) , (Hukari, 0), (Klein, 1), (Levine, 0), (Pullum, 0) }. Then unification of the partial functions amounts to union of the corresponding sets. This is fine if our intended interpretation of the set is conjunctive, i.e., if {a, b, c} means that a holds and b holds and c holds (Carpenter has a British address and Klein has a British address and Gazdar has a British address). But if our intended interpretation is disjunctive, then we want the unification operation to give us intersection, not union. FUG actually uses set-valued attributes with a disjunctive interpretation Kay (1979) . And, in a discussion of possible enhancements to the PATR II formalism, Karttunen (1984) provides a number of very relevant examples that illustrate the issues that arise when a unification-based formalism is augmented in order to encompass disjunction. As Chris Barker has pointed out to us, a perverse variant of the approach to conjunctively interpreted sets outlined above serves to handle the disjunctive interpretation of sets of atoms. We map the set {Accusative, Dative} into the partial function {(NOMINATIVE, 0>, (ABLATIVE, 0}, (GENITIVE, 0)} on the domain {ACCUSATIVE, DATIVE, NOMINATIVE, ABLATIVE, GENITIVE}. NOW unification (and hence union) of such complement-specifying partial functions gives us an operation equivalent to intersection applied to the original sets. Thus the unification of {(NOMINATIVE, 0), (ABLATIVE, 0), (GENITIVE, 0>}", "cite_spans": [ { "start": 345, "end": 387, "text": "Pullum, Carpenter, Klein, Hukari, Levine},", "ref_id": null }, { "start": 425, "end": 433, "text": "(Gazdar,", "ref_id": null }, { "start": 434, "end": 436, "text": "1)", "ref_id": null }, { "start": 546, "end": 554, "text": "(Gazdar,", "ref_id": null }, { "start": 555, "end": 557, "text": "1)", "ref_id": null }, { "start": 598, "end": 606, "text": "(Pullum,", "ref_id": null }, { "start": 607, "end": 609, "text": "0)", "ref_id": null }, { "start": 1132, "end": 1142, "text": "Kay (1979)", "ref_id": "BIBREF34" }, { "start": 1217, "end": 1233, "text": "Karttunen (1984)", "ref_id": "BIBREF31" } ], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "SETS AS VALUES", "sec_num": "5" }, { "text": "(standing for {Accusative, Dative}) with {(NOMINATIVE, 0), (ACCUSATIVE, 0), (GENITIVE, 0)} (standing for {Ablative, Dative}) gives us {(NOMINATIVE, 0>, (ABLATIVE, 0), (GENITIVE, 0), (ACCUSATIVE, 0>} which stands for {Dative}.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "SETS AS VALUES", "sec_num": "5" }, { "text": "Clearly, the present approach could be generalized to directly allow a type of feature that would take sets of atoms as values. The price to be paid for this, in a metatheoretical exercise such as the one we are engaged in, would be that the definition of unification becomes dependent on the intended interpretation of such features: the relevant clause needs to use union if the interpretation is conjunction, and intersection if the interpretation is disjunction.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "SETS AS VALUES", "sec_num": "5" }, { "text": "An altogether more serious issue arises when we consider the possibility of attributes taking sets of categories as values. We could represent such sets in a manner analogous to the treatment of lists, but with a special marking (given in terms of special attributevalue pairs) indicating that the list representation in question is to be interpreted as a set. The trouble with this is that the identity conditions for the resulting objects are no longer transparent. Two structurally distinct lists may or may not count as identical, depending on whether or not they are both representing sets, and that in turn will depend on whether particular attributes appear in certain relevant structural positions. Likewise, our existing definitions of unification and subsumption would simply fail to provide one with intuitively reasonable results, and its seems unlikely that they could be made to do so without further formal contortions. This whole strategy seems contrived and inelegant.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "SETS AS VALUES", "sec_num": "5" }, { "text": "The alternative is, again, to introduce a new type of feature, one taking sets of categories as its values, and some recent works have done just this. Sabimana (1986) proposes a feature ARG which takes a set of categories as its value. The feature appears on elements that correspond semantically to predicates, and its value is the set containing the categories that correspond semantically to the arguments of that predicate. The Japanese Phrase Structure Grammar (JPSG) of Gunji (in press) goes further in that it restricts itself entirely to such features (together with atom-valued features, of course) and does not employ simple category-valued features at all.", "cite_spans": [ { "start": 151, "end": 166, "text": "Sabimana (1986)", "ref_id": "BIBREF56" } ], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "SETS AS VALUES", "sec_num": "5" }, { "text": "Both FUG and LFG also permit category-set values, in effect, though the interpretation they assign to the resulting objects is, once again, different. FUG's interpretation is, as with atom sets, disjunctive. On this interpretation, unification of two sets of categories can be defined as the set of categories each of whose members is the unification of a pair in their Cartesian product (again, see Karttunen (1984) for relevant discussion of this kind of approach). In LFG, sets of categories acting as values for single attributes are used in the analysis of adjuncts (and possibly coordination) and the interpretation is intendedly conjunctive Kaplan and Bresnan (1982) . Under this interpretation, there is, in general, no unique unification to be had, although one can define an operation to provide one with a set of possible unifications. In Gunji (in press), where a conjunctive interpretation is assigned to category-set values, the non-uniqueness problem is sidestepped by defining unify as a predicate of category pairs, rather than as an operation.", "cite_spans": [ { "start": 400, "end": 416, "text": "Karttunen (1984)", "ref_id": "BIBREF31" }, { "start": 648, "end": 673, "text": "Kaplan and Bresnan (1982)", "ref_id": "BIBREF30" } ], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "SETS AS VALUES", "sec_num": "5" }, { "text": "In view of all these considerations, we have opted for simplicity over generality and simply excluded set valued features from our purview.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "SETS AS VALUES", "sec_num": "5" }, { "text": "One property that FUG and PATR II have in common, which sets them apart from the simpler grammar type discussed earlier in this paper, is the option of letting two or more distinct features share the same value. Thus, FUG functional descriptions allow one instance of a value to simultaneously be the value of more than one (instance of an) attribute. Consequently, the implicit hierarchy, represented graphically, does not respect the single-mother requirement that is built deep into our definitions. Of course, two category-valued features within a category may contingently have identical values, but this is not the same as sharing the same value (except in common parlance, perhaps). Kasper and Rounds (1986) refer to the distinction as one of type identity versus token identity. If we take a category, containing two contingently identical category-values, and unify it with a second category, then the contingent identity may not be preserved in the result. Consider, for example, the result of unifying these two categories:", "cite_spans": [ { "start": 690, "end": 714, "text": "Kasper and Rounds (1986)", "ref_id": "BIBREF33" } ], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "SHARED VALUES", "sec_num": "6" }, { "text": "where the values of F and H are identical in the first but not in the second. The result is: d e and here the values of ~\" and H are no longer identical. If the original common value had been genuinely shared, then no unification would have been possible (see also Shieber (1985) where the term \"reentrancy\" is used in this connection).", "cite_spans": [ { "start": 265, "end": 279, "text": "Shieber (1985)", "ref_id": "BIBREF58" } ], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "SHARED VALUES", "sec_num": "6" }, { "text": "There is an alternative way of thinking about the problem of shared values, and that is to reconstruct it in terms of indexing: every value carries an index, and two structurally identical values are the very same thing if and only if they bear the same index. An integer indexing of this sort can be represented in the present framework as we have already see in section 4.5 above. However, a coindexing reconstruction would not be a sensible way of thinking about shared values in the present context since such a use of indices makes nonsense of structurally defined unification, subsumption, and so on. For two intuitively identical structures to unify, it would not be sufficient for them to exhibit the same internal patterns of coindexed values. Rather, they would need in addition to manifest the very same choice of indices. Clearly, this is not what one wants, as choice of index is completely arbitrary, and structures differing only in identity of the integers selected as indices should be regarded as equivalent.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "SHARED VALUES", "sec_num": "6" }, { "text": "To achieve a semantics for shared-value category formalisms, it is necessary to move beyond the partial function-based category structures that provide the basis for our semantics, and thus depart from the particular category constraint logic that it induces. Like set values, shared values are simply beyond the scope of the rather parsimonious theory of categories developed here. 5 The reader interested in pursuing richer approaches should consult Pereira and Shieber (1984) for a domain-theoretic account of the semantics of categories in LFG, PATR II, and GPSG; Ait- Kaci and Nasr (1986) , who capture shared values with a coreference relation on the nodes of the tree; Kasper and Rounds (1986) , Moshier and Rounds (1987) , and Rounds and Kasper (1986) for a finite state automaton-based logic and semantics for categories in FUG and PATR II; and van Benthem (1986a, b) for an interesting foundational discussion and application of such an automatonbased semantics.", "cite_spans": [ { "start": 452, "end": 478, "text": "Pereira and Shieber (1984)", "ref_id": "BIBREF46" }, { "start": 573, "end": 593, "text": "Kaci and Nasr (1986)", "ref_id": "BIBREF1" }, { "start": 676, "end": 700, "text": "Kasper and Rounds (1986)", "ref_id": "BIBREF33" }, { "start": 703, "end": 728, "text": "Moshier and Rounds (1987)", "ref_id": "BIBREF43" }, { "start": 735, "end": 759, "text": "Rounds and Kasper (1986)", "ref_id": "BIBREF54" }, { "start": 833, "end": 849, "text": "FUG and PATR II;", "ref_id": null }, { "start": 850, "end": 876, "text": "and van Benthem (1986a, b)", "ref_id": null } ], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "SHARED VALUES", "sec_num": "6" }, { "text": "We have developed and applied a general framework for defining syntactic categories, including categories in which features can have categories as their value, which latter possibility turns out to subsume the possibility of a feature taking as its value a list of indices or categories, drawn from either a finite or an infinite set. The unitary way in which we have characterized these diverse systems is intended to assist in the exploration and comparison of grammatical formalisms. Questions concerning whether particular rule types and operations on categories that are familiar from one approach to grammar can be carried over unproblematically to another approach, and questions concerning the implementation difficulties that arise when a given formalism is adopted, can in many cases be settled in a straightforward and familiar way, namely by reducing them to previously encountered types of question.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "CONCLUSION", "sec_num": "7" }, { "text": "The grammatical frameworks we have considered as examples fall into a five-class typology which we can now explicate. The first class contains the frameworks that use only atom-valued features (simple phrase structure grammar, Harman's augmented phrase structure grammar; RG and APG); the second contains the special case of GKPS, which uses category-valued features but imposes a constraint which prevents them from having effects on expressive power that could not ultimately by simulated by atom-valued features; the third contains the frameworks that use just a single category-valued feature (our key example being indexed grammar); the fourth contains frameworks making use of more than one category-valued feature (an example being categorial grammar); and the fifth includes those frameworks that fall outside the scheme we have developed in that their categories are not representable as finite partial functions constrained by statements in L c (LFG, FUG, PATR II, etc.) .", "cite_spans": [ { "start": 955, "end": 980, "text": "(LFG, FUG, PATR II, etc.)", "ref_id": null } ], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "CONCLUSION", "sec_num": "7" }, { "text": "It is not at all clear which of these five classes of approaches will prove the most suitable for implementing natural language processing systems in the long term. In this paper, we hope to have made somewhat clearer the nature of the issues at stake. We hope also to have done something more: for the first four classes, we have provided what is in effect a unitary type of data structure for the representation of their syntactic categories. Thinking in terms of such data structures should make it possible for pseudo-issues in natural language processing research to be avoided in a large class of circumstances, to the point that even a decision in mid-project to change the grammatical framework from one linguistic approach to another need not entail any fundamental redesign of what are in most frameworks the basic objects of syntactic representation.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "CONCLUSION", "sec_num": "7" }, { "text": "In this appendix we restate the semantic rules for L c more precisely. All well-formed expressions of L c have Computational Linguistics, Volume 14, Number 1, Winter 1988", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "APPENDIX", "sec_num": null }, { "text": "Computational Linguistics, Volume 14, Number 1, Winter 1988", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "", "sec_num": null }, { "text": "Computational Linguistics, Volume 14, Number I, Winter 1988", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "", "sec_num": null }, { "text": "Gerald Gazdar et al.Category Structures", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "", "sec_num": null }, { "text": "Computational Linguistics, Volume 14, Number 1, Winter 1988 Gerald Gazdar et ai.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "", "sec_num": null }, { "text": "Gerald Gazdar et al.", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "", "sec_num": null } ], "back_matter": [ { "text": "Chris Barker has contributed substantively to the research reported here, and we offer him our gratitude. We are also grateful to Edward Briscoe, Jeremy Carroll, Roger Evans, Joseph Halpern, David J. Israel, Ronald M. Kaplan, William Keller, James Kilbury, William A. Ladusaw, Christopher Mellish, Richard E. Otte, Fernando Pereira, P. Stanley Peters, Carl J. Pollard, Stephen Pulman, William Rounds, Stuart M. Shieber, Henry Thompson and Manfred Warmuth for their generous assistance during the research reported in this paper. Though in some respects they have contributed substantially, they should not be associated with any errors that the paper may contain. In addition, we thank Calvin J. Pullum, who is responsible for the diagrams, and we acknowledge partial research support from the following sources: the UCSC Syntax Research Center (Gazdar, Hukari, Levine, Pullum); grants from the (U.K.) SERC and ESRC (Gazdar); NSF Graduate Fellowship RCD-8651747 (Carpenter); NSF grants BNS-85 11687 and BNS-85 19708 (Pullum).", "cite_spans": [], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "ACKNOWLEDGMENTS", "sec_num": null }, { "text": "the same kind of denotation~they denote truth values (i.e., members of 2) relative to the category structure and a category a determined by E. If 05 is a well-formed expression of L o then we use f105flx,~ to stand for the denotation of 05 with respect to the category structure and category a. If 005(]z~,, ~ = 1 then we shall say that t~ SATISFIES 05. The formal statement of our semantic rules is the following, where a, f, 05, and q~ are as above. Note that if a ~_ fl and a satisfies 05, it does ~0T follow in L c that 3 satisfies 05 (compare Rounds and Kasper (1986) , Theorem 6). For example, we have ~ ~_ {(F, a)} and ~ satisfies --1 F, but {(F, a)} does not. Likewise, the fact that both a and/3 satisfy some constraint 05 does not entail that a U/3 will satisfy 05, even if a IA/3 is defined. The desire to incorporate negation whilst maintaining an upward closure property lead Moshier and Rounds (1987) to set aside a classical semantics for their feature description language and postulate an intuitionistic se mantics that, in effect, quantifies over possible extensions.We will write ~ 05 to mean that for every category structure ]i and category a in 11, a satisfies 05. Given this, we can list some valid formula: and valid formula schemata of the logic of category constraints.This simply says that if a feature has an atomic value, then it has a value. We also have all the valid formula: of the standard propositional calculus, which we will not list here. Furthermore, we have the following familiar valid modal formula:. Here, (A2h) shows us that our logic at least contains $4 (we follow the nomenclature of Hughes and Cresswell (1968) This shows that our logic does not contain $4.2. Interestingly, the converse of this constraint zs valid, hence:This is easy to demonstrate: if o~ satisfies [] O 05 then 0 05 must hold in all the categories that terminate a, and if O 05 holds in those categories, then 4, and I-]05 hold in them as well. So r-]05 holds in at least one category in o~, and thus a must satisfy O D05. This shows that our logic at least contains K1 and, as a consequence, is not contained by SS.However, our logic cannot contain K2, since the latter contains S4.2. Nor does it contain K1.2 since the latter's characteristic axiom, namely ~ 05 ~ 1-1( O 05 ~ 05) is shown to be invalid by the category {(G, a), (F, {(G, b), (F, {(G, a)})})} (shown in (51), below) when set set 05 = (c: a).", "cite_spans": [ { "start": 548, "end": 572, "text": "Rounds and Kasper (1986)", "ref_id": "BIBREF54" }, { "start": 889, "end": 914, "text": "Moshier and Rounds (1987)", "ref_id": "BIBREF43" }, { "start": 1631, "end": 1658, "text": "Hughes and Cresswell (1968)", "ref_id": "BIBREF25" } ], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "annex", "sec_num": null }, { "text": "In fact, our logic does not merely contain K1, it also contains KI.1, whose characteristic axiom is:Hughes and Cresswell note that KI.1 'is characterized by the class of all finite partial orderings, i.e., finite frames in which R [the accessibility relation] is reflexive, transitive, and antisymmetrical ' Hughes and Cresswell ((1984) , p. 162). So it should be no surprise, given the basis for our semantics, that our logic turns out to include KI.1. This logic, also known as S4Grz (after Grzegorczyk (1967)), 'is decidable, for every nontheorem of S4Grz is invalid in some finite weak partial ordering' (Boolos (1979, p. 167) .Two further valid formula schemata of Lc have some interest, before we conclude the list of valid formula: in (A2):The first of these follows from the fact that categories are finite in size and thus ultimately grounded in categories that contain no category-valued features: f must be false of these terminating embedded categories, and hence O --1 f must be true of the category as a whole.The second states that if a category is defined for a category-valued feature whose value satisfies 4,, then the category as a whole satisfies O 4'. It is worth considering the valid formulae one would get in certain restricted classes of category structures. Suppose we consider category structures which contain only atom-valued features (i.e., F = F\u00b0). In this case, as one would expect, the modal logic collapses into the propositional calculus and the relevant notion of validity (call it Po) gives us the following:The converse case, where we only permit categoryvalued features (i.e. F = F1), is uninteresting, since it is not distinct from the general case. We can always encode atom-valued features as (sets of) categoryvalued features and subject the latter to appropriate constraints, as follows. For every feature specification (f, a) such thatfE F \u00b0 and a E p(f), we introduce a new type 1 feature fa and use the presence of 0Ca, 0) to encode the presence of (f, a) and likewise absence to encode absence. Then, for each pair of atoms a and b in p(f), we require the new features to satisfy [] -7 (fa A fb). And to constrain each new feature fa to have the empty set as its value, we stipulate [] -7 (fa:g) for every feature g.However, consider validity in category structures containing at most one category-valued feature (call this kind of validity ~ 1)-With this restriction, the $4.2 axiom considered earlier becomes valid:In addition, we get (A7).This means that this restricted logic at least contains K3, but it cannot contain K4, since ~1~)~ (0[~(~ \"--> D~b) is falsified by the category {(G, a), (~\" {(G, b), (~', {(G, a)})})} when we set ~b = (G: a).In fact it must also contain K3.1, in view of the validity of (A2j) above, and this logic, also known as S4.3Grz, is characterized by finite linear orderings Hughes and Cresswell (1984) . This is the characterization we would expect given the character of the ~1 restriction on the form of permissible categories, since with only one category-valued feature, there is at most one path through the structure of a category and so the partial order becomes a linear order. These observations concerning the logic induced by category structures where IFll = 1 are of some potential relevance to the study of indexed grammars whose categories can be-construed as being restricted in just this way (see section 4.9, above). NOTES 1. Bresnan (1975) correctly attributes the [-+N, -+V] feature system to lectures delivered by Chomsky at the 1974 Linguistic Institute in Amherst, Massachusetts. In some works, e.g., Jackendoff (1977) and Gazdar, Klein, Pullum, and Sag (1985) , Chomsky (1970) is wrongly given as the source. The latter work does, however, contain the following relevant comment: \"we might just as well eliminate the distinction of feature and category, and regard all symbols of the grammar as sets of features\" (p. 208). 2. As Hendriks (1986) has noted, the definition of categories given in GKPS \"is a bit of a mess from a formal point of view \" (1986, p. 19) . Definition 1 reads as follows: ,,po is a function from F to POW(A) such that for allf~ (F-Atom), p\u00b000 = {{}}\" (GKPS, p. 36) . But {{}} is not in the power set of A; \"POW(A)\" should be replaced by \"POW(A) O {{{}}}\". Parts of the text and examples following Definition l assume correctly that it ends ,,pO(f) = {{}},,, but other parts assume incorrectly that it ends ,,po(f) = {},,. If the latter version were adopted, Definition 4 would fail to add category-valued feature specifications in the desired way (since the condition \"3C' E ff'-~(t)[C' C_ C]\" would never be satisfied wheren = 1.) 3 The \"feature cooccurrence restrictions\" (FCRs) of GKPS form part of the definition of admissible tree rather than being part of the definition of categories. However, every GKPS FCR can be expressed in L c, and the translation is trivial. 4. We are indebted to Joseph Haipern for his help with the material in this section. 5. One of our referees has suggested that our semantics can be made to handle sharing by introducing an equality predicate into L c, marking shared value situations with special nonce features, and then using conditional constraints triggered by these features to impose identical values on the relevant features. But we have been unable to get any scheme of this kind to work in the general case. There appears to be no upper bound to the number of nonce features that may be required, and moreover, unification ceases to behave in an intuitively reasonable manner.", "cite_spans": [ { "start": 306, "end": 336, "text": "' Hughes and Cresswell ((1984)", "ref_id": "BIBREF26" }, { "start": 608, "end": 630, "text": "(Boolos (1979, p. 167)", "ref_id": null }, { "start": 2856, "end": 2883, "text": "Hughes and Cresswell (1984)", "ref_id": "BIBREF26" }, { "start": 3425, "end": 3439, "text": "Bresnan (1975)", "ref_id": "BIBREF8" }, { "start": 3605, "end": 3622, "text": "Jackendoff (1977)", "ref_id": "BIBREF28" }, { "start": 3627, "end": 3664, "text": "Gazdar, Klein, Pullum, and Sag (1985)", "ref_id": null }, { "start": 3667, "end": 3681, "text": "Chomsky (1970)", "ref_id": "BIBREF9" }, { "start": 3934, "end": 3949, "text": "Hendriks (1986)", "ref_id": "BIBREF22" }, { "start": 4052, "end": 4067, "text": "\" (1986, p. 19)", "ref_id": null }, { "start": 4180, "end": 4186, "text": "(GKPS,", "ref_id": null }, { "start": 4187, "end": 4193, "text": "p. 36)", "ref_id": null } ], "ref_spans": [], "eq_spans": [], "section": "I", "sec_num": null } ], "bib_entries": { "BIBREF0": { "ref_id": "b0", "title": "Indexed Grammars", "authors": [ { "first": "Alfred", "middle": [ "V" ], "last": "Aho", "suffix": "" } ], "year": 1968, "venue": "Journal of the Association for Computing Machinery", "volume": "15", "issue": "", "pages": "647--671", "other_ids": {}, "num": null, "urls": [], "raw_text": "Aho, Alfred V. 1968 Indexed Grammars. 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Addison-Wesley, Reading, Massachusetts.", "links": null } }, "ref_entries": { "FIGREF0": { "text": "Vf E (A(a) fq F \u00b0) [a(f) = /3(f)] and (ii) Vf E (A(a) tq F 1) [a(f) F\"/3(f)].", "uris": null, "num": null, "type_str": "figure" }, "FIGREF1": { "text": "(12) a. F = {LABEL, F 1 ..... Fn} b. A = {al ..... a,,} tA 2 c. \"r 0 d. p = {(LABEL, {a 1 ..... am}), (FI, 2) ..... (Fn, 2)}", "uris": null, "num": null, "type_str": "figure" }, "FIGREF2": { "text": ": (14) a. F = {LABEL, F I ..... Fn} b. A = {al ..... am} U 2 c. ~'o d. p = {(LABEL, {a I ..... am}), (F1, 2) ..... (Fn, 2)} Here Major = {?l ..... ?n}, and GNo = {? 1 ..... ~,} U {a I .....", "uris": null, "num": null, "type_str": "figure" }, "FIGREF3": { "text": "16) a. F = {N, V, BAR} b. a = {0, 1,2,3} C. ~o d. p = {iN, 2), (V, 2>, (BAR, a)} (17) N/% v/% BAR This yields a system of 16 categories, four at each bar level. Jackendoff (1977) proposes a version of X-bar syntax in which lexical categories are distinguished from one another by means of the features [-----SUBJ], [--0BJ], [-----C0MP], and [--+DET] rather than by I-----N] and [-+v]. He does not provide an explicit definition of his full set of categories, but he gives enough detail for it to be deducible. To define Jackendoff's system of categories, we fix our values for F, A, ~', and p in the manner shown below: (18) a. F = {SUBJ, C0MP, DET, 0BJ, BAR} b. a = {0, 1,2,3} C. 7 0 d. p = {(SUBJ, 2), (C0MP, 2), (DET, 2), (0BJ, 2), , (C0MP, 1), (BAR, n)} b. 0(M\") = (SUBJ, 1), (0BO, I), (C0MP, 0>, (bar, n)} c. 0(P\") = {(SUBJ, 0), (0BJ, I), (C0MP, 1), (BAR, n)} d. 0(Prt n) = {(SUBJ, 0), (OBJ, 1), , (C0MP, 1), (BAR, n)} f. 0(Art\") = {(SUBJ, 1), (0BJ, 0>, , (BAR, n)} h. 0(A n) = {(SUBJ, 0), (OBJ, 0), (C0MP, 1),(BAR, n)", "uris": null, "num": null, "type_str": "figure" }, "FIGREF6": { "text": "24) a. F = {SUBJ, N, C0MP, BAR ..... AGR, SLASH} b. A = {0, 1, 2, .... for, that .... } C. ~\" = {(SUBJ, 0), , } The constraints that must be imposed are the following: (28) a. PRONOUN b. (PRONOUN:question) ~ (CASE /~ -'-I PERSON /'k ---I NUMBER /~ ANIMACY /~ 7 PROXIMITY) C. (PRONOUN:personaD <--> (CASE /~ PERSON /~ NUMBER /k -q ANIMACY /~ \"7 PROXIMITY) d. (PRONOUN:demonstrative) <--) (7 CASE /~ 7 PERSON /~ NUMBER /~ -3 ANIMACY /~ PROXIMITY) e. GENDER ~ (PRONOUN A (PERSON:thirD A (NUMBER: singular))", "uris": null, "num": null, "type_str": "figure" }, "FIGREF10": { "text": "30) a. F = {LABEL, DOMAIN, RANGE} b. A = {a, ..... a.} C. \"/\" = {}", "uris": null, "num": null, "type_str": "figure" }, "FIGREF12": { "text": "35) [-](DOMAIN ~ DIRECTION) The translation function is then: (36) a. O(a i) = {, , , , (INDEX, 0>, (LIST, I>} d. p --{(LABEL, {a I ..... am}), (INDEX, {0, i I ..... i,}>} A list of indices of the form (38a) is represented as (38b). (38) a. [J0, Jl ..... JJ b. {(LIST, { , (LIST, {})} . . .>} In addition, we need the following constraints: (39) a. LABEL /% LIST b. [] --1 (LABEL /~ INDEX) C. [] --I (LIST: --I INDEX) d. [] --I (LIST /~ INDEX:0)", "uris": null, "num": null, "type_str": "figure" }, "TABREF1": { "text": "", "content": "
Question __--Subjective
CaseObjective Reflex ve Possessive Possessive-Determ ner
_I First
Personal~_.P__~ Second__ I Feminine
Ingular--JNeuter
f[| Plural
Demonstrative --l~ Near
", "html": null, "type_str": "table", "num": null } } } }