Rod Johnson


1994

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On the Portability of Complex Constraint-Based Grammars
C.J. Rupp | Rod Johnson
COLING 1994 Volume 2: The 15th International Conference on Computational Linguistics

1985

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A MUl View of the <C,A>, T Framework in EUROTRA
Doug Arnold | Lieven Jaspaert | Rod Johnson | Steven Krauwer | Mike Rosner | Louis des Tombe | Nino Varile | Susan Warwick
Proceedings of the first Conference on Theoretical and Methodological Issues in Machine Translation of Natural Languages

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A Preliminary Linguistic Framework for EUROTRA, June 1985
Louis des Tombe | Doug Arnold | Lieven Jaspaert | Rod Johnson | Steven Krauwer | Mike Rosner | Nino Varile | Susan Warwick
Proceedings of the first Conference on Theoretical and Methodological Issues in Machine Translation of Natural Languages

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EUROTRA: A Multilingual System under Development
Rod Johnson | Maghi King | Louis des Tombe
Computational Linguistics Formerly the American Journal of Computational Linguistics, Volume 11, Number 2-3, April-September 1985

1984

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Robust Processing in Machine Translation
Doug Arnold | Rod Johnson
10th International Conference on Computational Linguistics and 22nd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics

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Robust processing in machine translation
Doug Arnold | Rod Johnson
Proceedings of the International Conference on Methodology and Techniques of Machine Translation: Processing from words to language

We attempt to develop a general theory of robust processing for natural language, and especially Machine Translation purposes. That is, a general characterization of methods by which processes can be made resistant to malfunctioning of various kinds. We distinguish three sources of malfunction: (a) deviant inputs, (b) deviant outputs, and (c) deviant pairings of input and output, and describe the assumptions that guide our discussion (sections 1 and 2). We classify existing approaches to (a)and (b)-robustness, noting that not only do such approaches fail to provide a solution to (c)-type problems, but that the natural consequence of these solutions is to make (c)-type malfunctions harder to detect (section 3) In the final section (4) we outline possible solutions to (c)-type malfunctions.