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Natural Language Processing Syllabus

The document describes a course on natural language processing. The 3 credit course introduces fundamentals of language processing from an algorithmic perspective and discusses applications of NLP. The syllabus covers levels of language analysis, syntax, semantics, pragmatics, and applications. Students will learn about NLP concepts and algorithms, and be able to design NLP systems and applications involving text processing. The course is divided into 6 modules over 2 semesters and assessed through internal exams and an end semester exam.

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SHINI RENJITH
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
430 views2 pages

Natural Language Processing Syllabus

The document describes a course on natural language processing. The 3 credit course introduces fundamentals of language processing from an algorithmic perspective and discusses applications of NLP. The syllabus covers levels of language analysis, syntax, semantics, pragmatics, and applications. Students will learn about NLP concepts and algorithms, and be able to design NLP systems and applications involving text processing. The course is divided into 6 modules over 2 semesters and assessed through internal exams and an end semester exam.

Uploaded by

SHINI RENJITH
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Course L-T-P Year of

Course Name
code Credits Introduction
CS366 Natural language processing 3-0-0-3 2016
Prerequisite: Nil
Course Objectives
 To introduce the fundamentals of Language processing from the algorithmic viewpoint.
 To discuss various issues those make natural language processing a hard task.
 To discuss some applications of Natural Language Processing (NLP).
Syllabus
Levels of Language Analysis, Syntax, Semantics and Pragmatics of Natural Language, Language
Processing, Issues and approaches to solutions, Applications of Natural Language Processing
(NLP).
Expected Outcome
The student able to
1. appreciate the fundamental concepts of Natural Language Processing.
2. design algorithms for NLP tasks.
3. develop useful systems for language processing and related tasks involving text
processing.
Text Books
1. D. Jurafsky and J. H. Martin, Speech and Language Processing, Prentice Hall India, 2000
2. James Allen, Natural Language Understanding, 2e, The Benjamin/Cummings Publishing
Company Inc., Redwood City, CA.
References

. I N
1. Charniak, Eugene, Introduction to Artificial intelligence, Addison-Wesley, 1985..

ES
2. Ricardo Baeza-Yates and Berthier Ribeiro-Neto, Modern Information Retrieval,
Addison-Wesley,1999.
N O T
KTU
3. U. S. Tiwary and Tanveer Siddiqui, Natural Language Processing and Information
Retrieval, Oxford University Press, 2008.
Course Plan
End
Sem.
Module Contents Hours
Exam
Marks
Introduction to Natural Language Understanding- Levels of
I language analysis- Syntax, Semantics, Pragmatics. 8 15%
Linguistic Background- An Outline of English Syntax.
Lexicons, POS Tagging, Word Senses.
II Grammars and Parsing- Features, Agreement and Augmented 7 15%
Grammars.
FIRST INTERNAL EXAM
Grammars for Natural Language, Parsing methods and Efficient
Parsing.
III 9 15%
Ambiguity Resolution- Statistical Methods. Probabilistic Context
Free Grammar.
Semantics and Logical Form: Linking Syntax and Semantics-
IV Ambiguity Resolution- other Strategies for Semantic Interpretation- 6 15%
Scoping and the Interpretation of Noun Phrases.
SECOND INTERNAL EXAM
V Knowledge Representation and Reasoning- Local Discourse 8 20%

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Context and Reference- Using World Knowledge- Discourse
Structure- Defining a Conversational Agent.
Applications- Machine Translation, Information Retrieval and
VI 4 20%
Extraction, Text Categorization and Summarization.
END SEMESTER EXAM

Question Paper Pattern


1. There will be five parts in the question paper – A, B, C, D, E
2. Part A
a. Total marks : 12
b. Four questions each having 3 marks, uniformly covering modules I and II; Allfour
questions have to be answered.
3. Part B
a. Total marks : 18
b. Three questions each having 9 marks, uniformly covering modules I and II; Two
questions have to be answered. Each question can have a maximum of three
subparts.
4. Part C
a. Total marks : 12
b. Four questions each having 3 marks, uniformly covering modules III and IV;
Allfour questions have to be answered.
5. Part D
a. Total marks : 18

S . N
b. Three questions each having 9 marks, uniformly covering modules III and IV;
I
Two questions have to be answered. Each question can have a maximum of three
E
subparts.

N O T
KTU
6. Part E
a. Total Marks: 40
b. Six questions each carrying 10 marks, uniformly covering modules V and VI; four
questions have to be answered.
c. A question can have a maximum of three sub-parts.

To get more study materails visit www.ktunotes.in

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