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How anchors allow reusing categories in neural composition of sentences

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 March 2006

William J. Clancey
Affiliation:
NASA Ames Research Center, Intelligent Systems Division, Moffett Field, CA 94035 William.J.Clancey@NASA.gov http://bill.clancey.name

Abstract

van der Velde's &de Kamps's neural blackboard architecture is similar to “activation trace diagrams” (Clancey 1999), which represent how categories are temporally related as neural activations in parallel-hierarchical compositions. Examination of other comprehension examples suggests that a given syntactic categorization (structure assembly) can be incorporated in different ways within an open composition by different kinds of anchoring relations (delay assemblies). Anchors are categorizations, too, so they cannot be reused until their containing construction is completed (bindings are resolved).

Type
Open Peer Commentary
Copyright
© 2006 Cambridge University Press

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