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BS ISO 24610-2:2011

Current

Current

The latest, up-to-date edition.

Language resource management. Feature structures Feature system declaration

Available format(s)

Hardcopy , PDF

Language(s)

English

Published date

31-01-2013

€322.53
Excluding VAT

Foreword
Introduction
1 Scope
2 Normative references
3 Terms and definitions
4 Overall structure
5 Basic concepts
6 Defining well-formedness versus validity
7 A feature system for a grammar
8 Declaration of a feature system
Annex A (normative) - XML schema for feature structures
Annex B (informative) - A complete example
Bibliography

Gives a format to represent, store or exchange feature structures in natural language applications, for both annotation and production of linguistic data.

Committee
TS/1
DevelopmentNote
Supersedes 08/30186692 DC. (01/2013) Reviewed and confirmed by BSI, May 2018. (05/2018)
DocumentType
Standard
Pages
62
PublisherName
British Standards Institution
Status
Current
Supersedes

This part of ISO24610 provides a format to represent, store or exchange feature structures in natural language applications, for both annotation and production of linguistic data. It is ultimately designed to provide a computer format to define a type hierarchy and to declare the constraints that bear on a set of feature specifications and operations on feature structures, thus offering means to check the conformance of each feature structure with regards to a reference specification. Feature structures are an essential part of many linguistic formalisms as well as an underlying mechanism for representing the information consumed or produced by and for language engineering applications.

A feature system declaration (FSD) is an auxiliary file used in conjunction with a certain type of text that makes use of fs (that is, feature structure) elements. The FSD serves four purposes.

  • It provides an encoding by which types and their subtyping and inheritance relationships can be introduced and defined, thus laying the basis for constructing a feature system.

  • It provides a mechanism by which the encoder can list all of the feature names and feature values and give a prose description as to what each represents.

  • It provides a mechanism by which type constraints can be declared, against which typed feature structures are validated relative to a given theory stated in typed feature logic. These constraints may involve constraints on the range of a feature\'s value, constraints on which features are permitted within certain types of feature structures, or constraints that prevent the co-occurrence of certain feature-value pairs. The source of these constraints is normally the empirical domain being modelled.

  • It provides a mechanism by which the encoder can define the intended interpretation of underspecified feature structures. This involves defining default values (whether literal or computed) for missing features.

The scheme described in this part of ISO24610 may be used to document any feature system, but is primarily intended for use with the typed feature structure representation defined in ISO24610-1. The feature structure representations of ISO24610-1 specify data structures that are subject to the typing conventions and constraints specified using ISO24610-2. The feature structure representations of ISO24610-1 are also used within some of the elements defined in ISO24610-2.

Standards Relationship
ISO 24610-2:2011 Identical

ISO/IEC 19757-2:2008 Information technology — Document Schema Definition Language (DSDL) — Part 2: Regular-grammar-based validation — RELAX NG
ISO 24610-1:2006 Language resource management Feature structures Part 1: Feature structure representation

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