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Computational lexicology : ウィキペディア英語版 | Computational lexicology
Computational lexicology is a branch of computational linguistics, which is concerned with the use of computers in the study of lexicon. It has been more narrowly described by some scholars (Amsler, 1980) as the use of computers in the study of ''machine-readable dictionaries''. It is distinguished from ''computational lexicography'', which more properly would be the use of computers in the construction of dictionaries, though some researchers have used computational lexicography as synonymous. ==History== Computational lexicology emerged as a separate discipline within computational linguistics with the appearance of machine-readable dictionaries, starting with the creation of the machine-readable tapes of the ''Merriam-Webster Seventh Collegiate Dictionary'' and the ''Merriam-Webster New Pocket Dictionary'' in the 1960s by John Olney et al. at System Development Corporation. Today, computational lexicology is best known through the creation and applications of WordNet. As the computational processing of the researchers increased over time, the use of computational lexigology has been applied ubiquitously in the text analysis. In 1987, amongst others Byrd, Calzolari, Chodorow have developed computational tools for text analysis. In particular the model was designed for coordinating the associations involving the senses of polysemous words.〔Byrd, Roy J., Nicoletta Calzolari, Martin S. Chodorow, Judith L. Klavans, Mary S. Neff, and Omneya A. Rizk. "Tools and methods for computational lexicology."''Computational Linguistics'' 13, no. 3-4 (1987): 219-240.〕
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