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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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An Introduction to the Theory of Formal Languages and Automata

Willem J.M. Levelt
Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen

2008. xi, 139 pp.
Publishing status: Available

PaperbackIn stock
978 90 272 3250 2 / EUR 29.00 / USD 43.95
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978 90 272 9007 6 / EUR 29.00 / USD 43.95
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The present text is a re-edition of Volume I of Formal Grammars in Linguistics and Psycholinguistics, a three-volume work published in 1974. This volume is an entirely self-contained introduction to the theory of formal grammars and automata, which hasn’t lost any of its relevance. Of course, major new developments have seen the light since this introduction was first published, but it still provides the indispensible basic notions from which later work proceeded. The author’s reasons for writing this text are still relevant: an introduction that does not suppose an acquaintance with sophisticated mathematical theories and methods, that is intended specifically for linguists and psycholinguists (thus including such topics as learnability and probabilistic grammars), and that provides students of language with a reference text for the basic notions in the theory of formal grammars and automata, as they keep being referred to in linguistic and psycholinguistic publications; the subject index of this introduction can be used to find definitions of a wide range of technical terms. An appendix has been added with further references to some of the core new developments since this book originally appeared.


Table of contents

Preface
ix–xi
Chapter 1. Grammars as formal systems
1–7
Chapter 2. The hierarchy of grammars
9–32
Chapter 3. Probabilistic grammars
33–48
Chapter 4. Finite automata
49–67
Chapter 5. Push-down automata
69–83
Chapter 6. Linear-bounded automata
85–93
Chapter 7. Turing machines
95–107
Chapter 8. Grammatical inference
109–123
Historical and bibliographical remarks
125–127
Appendix: Some references to new developments
129–130
Bibliography
131–133
Index of authors
135
Index of subjects
137–139