Books
We've found 388 books relevant to the field of humanlike conversational artificial intelligence.
Summary: The book describes syntax of human language perceived as a cognitive process of a human brain.
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10444
by Haralambos Marmanis and Dmitry Babenko |
Summary: Web 2.0 applications provide a rich user experience, but the parts you can’t see are just as important-and impressive. They use powerful techniques to process information intelligently and offer features based on patterns and relationships in data. Algorithms of the Intelligent Web shows readers how...
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10442
by David A. Forsyth and Jean Ponce |
Subtitle: |
A Modern Approach |
Publisher: |
Prentice Hall
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Year: |
2002 |
Order: |
http://www.amazon.com/Computer... |
Summary: The accessible presentation of this book gives both a general view of the entire computer vision enterprise and also offers sufficient detail to be able to build useful applications. Users learn techniques that have proven to be useful by first-hand experience and a wide range...
Publisher: |
Wiley
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Year: |
2010 |
Order: |
http://www.amazon.com/Algorith... |
Summary: Thanks to advances in computer hardware and software, algorithms have been developed that support sophisticated image processing without requiring an extensive background in mathematics. This bestselling book has been fully updated with the newest of these, including 2D vision methods in content-based searches and the...
Publisher: |
Academic Press
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Year: |
1972 |
Order: |
http://www.amazon.com/Understa... |
Summary: The book focuses on research in Natural Language Understanding, Natural Language Processing and related fields of human language technology.
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10439
by Jimmy Lin, Chris Dyer and Graeme Hirst |
Summary: Our world is being revolutionized by data-driven methods: access to large amounts of data has generated new insights and opened exciting new opportunities in commerce, science, and computing applications. Processing the enormous quantities of data necessary for these advances requires large clusters, making distributed computing...
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10438
by Igor A. Bolshakov and Alexander F. Gelbukh |
Summary: Can computers meaningfully process human language? If this is difficult, why? If this is possible, how? This book introduces the reader to the fascinating science of computational linguistics and automatic natural language processing, which combines linguistics and artificial intelligence. The main part of the book...
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10436
by Michael Rosner and Roderick Johnson |
Summary: This collection takes the exciting step of examining natural language phenomena from the perspectives of both computational linguistics and formal semantics. Computational linguistics has until now been primarily concerned with the construction of computational models for handling the complexities of linguistic form, but has not...
Summary: In spite of the rapid growth of interest in the computer analysis of language, this book provides an integrated introduction to the field. Inevitably, when many different approaches are still being considered, a straightforward work of synthesis would be neither possible nor practicable. Nevertheless, Ralph...
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10434
by Jan van Eijck and Christina Unger |
Summary: Computational semantics is the art and science of computing meaning in natural language. The meaning of a sentence is derived from the meanings of the individual words in it, and this process can be made so precise that it can be implemented on a computer....