Referenzen


[001] „A Component Language for Structured Parallel Programming“, Luc Bläser, Computer Systems Institute, Eidgenössisch Technische Hochschule Zürich, Schweiz

[002] „A Development Environment for an MTT-based Sentence Generator“, Bernd Bohnet, Andreas Langjahr, Leo Wanner, Fachbereich Informatik, Universität Stuttgart, Deutschland

[003] „A Linguistic Comparison of Constituency, Dependency and Link Grammar“, Gerold Schneider, Institut für Informatik, Universität Zürich, Schweiz

[004] „A Logical Language“, J. C. Brown, The Loglan Institute, http://www.loglan.org, 2007-04-17

[005] „A Pattern Language for the Design of Aspect Languages and Aspect Composition Frameworks“, Uwe Zdun, Fachbereich Informationssysteme, Wirtschaftsuniversität Wien, Österreich

[006] „A System for Natural Language Computation“, Alan W. Biermann, Bruce W. Ballard, Anne M. Holler, Department of Computer Science, Duke University, Durham, USA

[007] „A Translation Approach to Portable Ontology Specifications“, Thomas R. Gruber, Computer Science Department, Stanford University, USA

[008] „Agent-oriented Programming“, Yoav Shoham, Computer Science Department, Stanford University, USA

[009] „APL Programming: A Psychological Model“, Raymond C. Hooker, IBM Communication Products Division, Raleigh, USA

[010] „Applescript“, Apple Inc., http://www.apple.com/de/macosx/features/applescript, 2007-04-17

[011] „Applying a UML-based Agent Modeling Language to the Autonomic Computing Domain“, Ivan Trencansky, Radovan Cervenka, Dominic Greenword, Whitestein Technologies, Bratislava, Slowakei

[012] „Aspect-Oriented Programming and Modular Reasoning“, G. Kiczales, Department of Computer Science, University of British Columbia, Canada, M. Mezini, Fachbereich Informatik, Technische Universität Darmstadt, Deutschland, ICSE ’05: Proceedings of the 27th International Conference on Software Engineering, Seiten 49–58, ACM Press, 2005

[013] „Automated Derivation of Program Control Structures from Natural Language Program Descriptions“, David Wile, Robert Balzer, Neil Goldman, University of Southern California, Marina del Rey, USA

[014] „Automatic Programming with Semantic Streams“, Kamin Whitehouse, Computer Science Division, University of California, Berkeley, USA, Feng Zhao, Jie Liu, Microsoft Research, Redmond, USA

[015] „Automatic Programming: Myths and Prospects“, Charles Rich, Richard C. Waters, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, USA

[016] „Beyond AOP: Toward Naturalistic Programming“, Cristina Videira Lopez, Paul Dourish, School of Information and Computer Science, University of California, Irvine, USA, David H. Lorenz, Karl Lieberherr, College of Computer and Information Science, Northeastern University, Boston, USA, OOPSLA ’03: Companion of the 18th annual ACM SIGPLAN Conference on Object-Oriented Programming, Systems, Languages, and Applications, Seiten 198–207, ACM Press, 2003

[017] „Beyond Programming Languages“, Terry Winograd, Stanford University, USAω

[018] „Cω“, Microsoft Research, http://research.microsoft.com/Comega, 2007-04-17

[019] „CM-Builder: A Natural Language-Based CASE Tool for Object-Oriented Analysis“, H. M. Harmain, College of Information Technology, The United Arab Emirates University, Al-Ain, R. Gaizauskas, Department of Computer Science, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom

[020] „Concepts: Linguistic Support for Generic Programming in C++“, Douglas Gregor, Andrew Lumsdaine, Indiana University, Jaakko Järvi, Bjarne Stroustrup, Gabriel Dos Reis, Texas A&M University, College Station, USA, Jeremy Siek, Rice University, Houston, USA

[021] „Conscientious Software“, Richard P. Gabriel, Ron Goldman, Sun Microsystems Laboratories, Proceedings of the 21st annual ACM SIGPLAN Conference on Object-oriented Programming Systems, Languages, and Applications (OOPSLA), 2006

[022] „Deep Processing of Shallow Structures, The Robust Integration of Speech, Language and Translation, Technology for Intelligent Interface Agents“, Wolfgang Wahlster, Deutsches Forschungszentrum für Künstliche Intelligenz, Saarbrücken, Deutschland, Ninth Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics (EACL), 1999

[023] „Dependent Classes“, Vaidas Gasiunas, Mira Mezini, Klaus Ostermann, Fachbereich Informatik, Technische Universtität Darmstadt, Deutschland

[024] „Design Fragments Make Using Frameworks Easier“, George Fairbanks, David Garlan, William Scherlis, School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, USA

[025] „Design Patterns. Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software“, Erich Gamma, Richard Helm, Ralph E. Johnson, John Vlissides, ISBN: 978-0201633610, Addison-Wesley Longman, Amsterdam, 1995

[026] „Disambiguierung durch Wissensfusion: Grundprinzipien der Sprachtechnologie“, Wolfgang Wahlster, Deutsches Forschungszentrum für Künstliche Intelligenz, Saarbrücken, Deutschland

[027] „Ehnologue Survey“, http://www.ethnologue.com, 2007-04-25

[028] „English as a Very High Level Language for Simulation Programming“, George E. Heidorn, IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, New York, USA

[029] „Expressive Pointcuts for Increased Modularity“, Klaus Ostermann, Mira Mezini, Christoph Bockisch, Fachbereich Informatik, Technische Universität Darmstadt, Deutschland, ECOOP ’05: Proceedings of the 19th European Conference on Object-Oriented Programming, LNCS, Springer Press, 2005

[030] „Feasibility Studies for Programming in Natural Language“, Henry Lieberman, Hugo Liu, Media Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, USA

[031] „Foundations of Statistical Natural Language Processing“, Christopher D. Manning, Hinrich Schütze, ISBN: 978-0262133609, MIT-Press, 1999

[032] „Génération automatique de procédés anaphoriques dans les textes d'assemblage“, Leila Kosseim, Département d'informatique et de recherche opérationnelle, Université de Montréal, Canada

[033] „Hop, a Language for Programming the Web 2.0“, Manuel Serrano, Florian Loitsch, Inria Sophia Antipolis, Cedex, France, Erick Gallesio, Université de Nice, Cedex, France

[034] „Inform 7“, http://www.inform-fiction.org, 2006-07-26

[035] „Intentional Software“, Charles Simonyi, Magnus Christerson, Shane Clifford, Intentional Software Corporation, Bellevue, USA

[036] „Learning to Build and Comprehend Complex Information Structures: Prolog as a Case Study“, Paul Brna, Computer Based Learning Unit, Leeds University, United Kingdom, Benedict du Boulay, School of Cognitive and Computing Sciences, Sussex University, United Kingdom, Helen Pain, Division of Informatics, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom, Ablex Publishing Corporation, 1999

[037] „LogiMOO: A Multi-User Virtual World with Agents and Natural Language Programming“, Paul Tarau, Departement d'Informatique, Universtite de Moncton, Canada, Veronica Dahl, Stephen Rochefort, School of Computing Science, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, Canada, Koen De Bosschere, Vakgroep Elektronica en Informatiesystemen, Universiteit Gent, Belgium

[038] „M'PAL - A Programming Language Based on Natural English Definitions“, Michael H. Rosenbloom, New York, USA

[039] „Metafor: Visualizing Stories as Code“, Hugo Liu, Henry Liberman, Media Arts and Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, USA, 2005

[040] „Metaphors We Live By“, George Lakoff, Mark Johnson, ISBN: 0-226-46801-1, The University of Chicago Press, Ltd., London, 1980

[041] „MOOSE Crossing: Construction, Community, and Learning in a Networked Virtual World for Kids“, Amy Susan Bruckman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, USA, 1997

[042] „MultiJava: Modular Open Classes and Symmetric Multiple Dispatch for Java“, Curtis Clifton, Gary T. Leavens, Craig Chambers, Todd Millstein, Department of Computer Science, Iowa State University, Ames, USA

[043] „Natural Programming: Project Overview and Proposal“, Brad A. Myers, School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, USA

[044] „Naturalistic Programming: Styles, Strategies and Contrasts“, L. A. Miller, IBM Systems Journal, Band 20, Nr. 2, Seite 184, 1981

[045] „NaturalJava: A Natural Language Interface for Programming in Java“, David Price, Ellen Riloff, Joseph Zachary, Brandon Harvey, Department of Computer Science, University of Utah, USA

[046] „NaturalJava: A Natural Language Interface for Programming in Java“, David Price, Ellen Riloff, Joseph Zachary, Brandon Harvey, Department of Computer Science, University of Utah, USA

[047] „NLP (Natural Language Processing) for NLP (Natural Language Programming)“, Rada Mihalcea, Computer Science Department, University of North Texas, USA, Hugo Liu, Henry Lieberman, Media Arts and Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, USA

[048] „Objektorientierte Modellierung mit UML: Das Fundament“, James Martin, James J. Odell, ISBN: 3-8272-9580-7, Prentice Hall, 1999

[049] „Osmosian“, The Osmosian Order of Plain English Programmers, http://www.osmosian.org, 2007-02-03

[050] „Parasitic Methods: An Implementation of Multi-Methods for Java“, John Boyland, Computer Science Department, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, USA, Giuseppe Castagna, École Normale Supérieure, Paris, France

[051] „Pervasive Speech and Language Technology“, Wolfgang Wahlster, Deutsches Forschungszentrum für Künstliche Intelligenz, Saarbrücken, Deutschland

[052] „Preliminary Ideas of a Conceptual Programming Language“, Cheng-Xiang Zhai, Institute of Computer Software, Nanjing University, China

[053] „Programmatic Semantics for Natural Language Interfaces“, Hugo Liu, Henry Lieberman, Media Arts and Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, USA, 2005

[054] „Programming in Natural Language – "NLC" as a prototype“, B. W. Ballard and A. W. Biermann, Duke University, USA, ACM/CSC-ER: Proceedings of the 1979 annual conference, Seiten 228-237, ACM Press, 1979

[055] „Programming Languages, Natural Languages and Mathematics“, Peter Naur, Datalogisk Institut, Copenhagen University, Dänemark

[056] „Programming With Crosscutting Effective Views“, Doug Janzen and Kris De Volder, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada

[057] „Robust Translation of Spontaneous Speech“, Wolfgang Wahlster, Deutsches Forschungszentrum für Künstliche Intelligenz, Saarbrücken, Deutschland, Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 2001

[058] „Ruby on Rails“, http://www.rubyonrails.org, 2007-04-28

[059] „SearchBrowser - An Efficient Source Code Search Platform Based on Information Retrieval“, Ben Hermann, Conrad Müller, Fachbereich Informatik, Technische Universität Darmstadt, Deutschland

[060] „Semantic Analysis and Interactive Fiction“, Graham Nelson, St Anne’s College, Oxford, United Kingdom, http://www.inform-fiction.org/I7Downloads/Documents/WhitePaper.pdf, 2007-04-23

[061] „Semantic Analysis, A Practical Introduction“, Cliff Goddard, ISBN: 0-19-870016-4, Oxford University Press, 1998

[062] „Should We Leverage Natural-Language Knowledge? An Analysis of User Errors in a Natural-Language-Style Programming Language“, Amy Bruckman, Elizabeth Edwards, College of Computing, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, USA

[063] „Software Reuse by Specialization of Generic Procedures through Views“, Gordon S. Novak Jr., Universit. of Texas, Austin, USA, IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering, Band 23, Nr. 7, 1997

[064] „Specter: Building, Exploiting, and Sharing Augmented Memories“, Alexander Kröner, Dominik Heckmann, Wolfgang Wahlster, Deutsches Forschungszentrum für Künstliche Intelligenz, Saarbrücken, Deutschland, Proceedings of Knowledge Sharing for Everyday Life (KSEL), 2006

[065] „Speech and Language Processing: An Introduction to Natural Language Processing, Computational Linguistics and Speech Recognition“, ISBN: 978-0131227989, Daniel Juravsky, James H. Martin, Prentice Hall, 2003

[066] „STELLA - A Lisp-like Language for Symbolic Programming with Delivery in Common Lisp, C++, and Java“, Hans Chalupsky, Robert M. MacGregor, Information Sciences Institute, University of Southern California, USA

[067] „Structured Programmers Learning Object-Oriented Programming“, John Minor Ross, Huazhong Zhang, Indiana University Kokomo, USA

[068] „Studying the Language and Structure in Non-Programmers' Solutions to Programming Problems“, John F. Pane, Chotirat Ratanamahatana, Brad A. Myers, School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, USA

[069] „Subtext: Uncovering the Simplicity of Programming“, Jonathan Edwards, Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, USA, OOPSLA ’05: Proceedings of the 20th annual ACM SIGPLAN Conference on Object-Oriented Programming, Systems, Languages, and Applications, ACM Press, 2005

[070] „The Comparison of Programming Languages: a Linguistic Approach“, John B. Goodenough, Air Force Systems Command, Bedford, USA

[071] „The Future of Programming“, Anthony I. Wasserma, University of California, San Francisco, USA, Steven Gutz, Digital Equipment Corporation, USA

[072] „The Geography of Programming“, Elisa Baniassad, Sebastian Fleissner, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, The Chinese University of Hong-Kong

[073] „The Ontogenesis of Metaphor: Riddle Games among Quechua Speakers Seen as Cognitive Discovery Procedures“, Billie Jean Isbell, Cornell University, New York, USA, Fredy Amilcar Roncalla Fernandez, Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, Lima

[074] „The Open Mind Common Sense Project“, Push Singh, Media Arts and Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, USA, 2002, web.media.mit.edu—Kurzweil.html, 2006-07-26

[075] „The Search for the Shared Semantic Core of All Languages“, Cliff Goddard, University of New England, Australia

[076] „The Semantics of Metaphor and Parable: Looking for Meaning in the Gospels“, Anna Wierzbicka, School of Language Studies, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia

[077] „The Soul of a New Programming Language“, Guy Steele, Sun Microsystems Laboratories, 2006

[078] „The Universal Networking Language (UNL)“, UNDL Foundation, Specifications Version 3, Edition 2, 2003

[079] „The Use of English as a Programming Language“, Jean E. Sammet, IBM Corporation, Cambridge, USA

[080] „Toward a Programmatic Semantics of Natural Language“, Hugo Liu, Henry Lieberman, Media Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, USA

[081] „Toward Natural Language Computation“, Alan W. Biermann, Bruce W. Ballard, Department of Computer Science, Duke University, Durham, USA

[082] „Towards a Computational Formalization of Natural Language Semantics“, R. M. Schwarcz, International Conference on Computational Linguistics (COLING), 1969

[083] „Towards More Natural Functional Programming Languages“, Brad A. Myers, School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, USA

[084] „Towards Universal Speech Recognition“, Zhirong Wang, Umut Topkara, Tanja Schultz, Alex Waibel, Interactive Systems Laboratories, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, USA

[085] „Uniform Multilingual Sentence Generation Using Flexible Lexico-Grammatical Resources“, Raymond Kozlowski, Department of Computer Science, University of Delaware, Newark, USA

[086] „User Studies and the Design of Natural Language Systems“, Steve Whittaker, Phil Stenton, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories, Bristol, United Kingdom

[087] „Utilizing Spatial Relations for Natural Language Access to an Autonomous Mobile Robot“, Eva Stopp, Klaus-Peter Gapp, Gerd Herzog, Thomas Laengle, Tim C. Lueth, KI-Labor am Lehrstuhl für Informatik IV, Universität des Saarlandes, Saarbrücken, Deutschland

[088] „Verbmobil: Foundations of Speech-to-Speech Translation“, Wolfgang Wahlster, ISBN: 3-540-67783-6, Springer, 2000

[089] „What is a Good First Programming Language?“, Diwaker Gupta, Computer Science and Engineering Department, University of California, San Diego, USA

[090] „What the Nature of Natural Language Tells Us About How to Make Natural-Language-Like Programming Languages More Natural“, Jerry R. Hobbs, City College, New York, USA

[091] „Wiktionary“, Wikimedia Foundation, http://www.wiktionary.org, 2006-07-28

[092] „Wissensrepräsentation und empirische Semantik - Eine computerlinguistische Aufgabe“, Burghard Rieger, Fachbereich, Sprach- Literatur- und Medienwissenschaften, Universität Trier, Deutschland

 

Nachschlagen