• lugal@sopuli.xyz
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    13 天前

    There are other usages in computer linguistics. My master thesis was a neural parser. Other usages are in pattern recognition in medicine for example. But your point stands that often it makes things worse

    • Elting@piefed.social
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      13 天前

      I had heard about the medicine thing actually. When the use case actually lines up with what it is, it makes sense as a tool. It’s that old adage though “When you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail.”

    • BaroqueInMind@piefed.social
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      13 天前

      Is there any way I can read your thesis? I’m casually curious, and also have no idea if college thesis are allowed to be shared online with rando people like me.

      • lugal@sopuli.xyz
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        13 天前

        Well, it parses natural language. In linguistics, or syntax to be precise, there are different ideas on how to build syntax trees. The most common is Dependency Grammar, basically just a tree where every word points to the word it refers to (the adjective to the noun, the subject and the object to the verb, the verb is the root). I applied this to a different syntax theory called Role and Reference Grammar. You can google the latter, if you want to look into neural parsers in general, stanfordNLP has modules for python and I think online tools as well and stuff.