In this book, Almerindo E. Ojeda offers a unique perspective on linguistics by discussing the development of computer programs that will assign particular sounds to meanings and, conversely, meanings to particular sounds. Since these assignments are to operate efficiently over unbounded domains of sound and sense, they begin to model the two fundamental modalities of human language - speaking and hearing. The computational approach adopted in this book is motivated by one of the key problems of contemporary linguistics - figuring out how language emerges from the brain.
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Almerindo E. Ojeda is professor of linguistics at the University of California, Davis, director of the Center for the Study of Human Rights in the Americas, and director of the Project on the Engraved Sources of Spanish Colonial Art.
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