287 | -- | 290 | András Kornai. Extended finite state models of language |
291 | -- | 294 | Aravind K. Joshi, Phil Hopely. A parser from antiquity |
295 | -- | 302 | Bruce W. Watson. Implementing and using finite automata toolkits |
303 | -- | 304 | Manuel Vilares Ferro, Jorge Graña Gil, Pilar Alvariño. Finite state morphology and formal verification |
305 | -- | 328 | L. Karttunen, Jean-Pierre Chanod, Gregory Grefenstette, A. Schille. Regular expressions for language engineering |
329 | -- | 330 | Masakazu Tateno, Hiroshi Masuichi, Hiroshi Umemoto. The Japanese lexical transducer based on stem-suffix style forms |
331 | -- | 336 | Kimmo Koskenniemi. Finite state morphology and information retrieval |
337 | -- | 344 | Steven P. Abney. Partial parsing via finite-state cascades |
345 | -- | 350 | Emmanuel Roche. Transducer parsing of free and frozen sentences |
351 | -- | 354 | Juan Miguel Vilar, Víctor M. Jiménez, Juan-Carlos Amengual, Antonio Castellanos, David Llorens, Enrique Vidal. Text and speech translation by means of subsequential transducers |
355 | -- | 364 | Eva I. Ejerhed. Finite state segmentation of discourse into clauses |
365 | -- | 366 | Klaus U. Schulz, Tomek Miko Lajewski. Between finite state and Prolog: constraint-based automata for efficient recognition of phrases |
367 | -- | 368 | B. Srinivas. Explanation-based learning and finite state transducers: applications to parsing lexicalized tree adjoining grammars |
369 | -- | 380 | Richard Sproat. Multilingual text analysis for text-to-speech synthesis |
381 | -- | 382 | Mark-Jan Nederhof, Eberhard Bertsch. An innovative finite state concept for recognition and parsing of context-free languages |