ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1978, The Process of Question Answering examines a phenomenon that relies on many realms of human cognition: language comprehension, memory retrieval, and language generation. Problems in computational question answering assume a new perspective when question answering is viewed as a problem in natural language processing. A theory of human question answering must necessarily entail a theory of human memory organization and theories of the cognitive processes that access and manipulate information in memory. This book describes question answering as a particular task in information processing. The theoretical models described here have been built on a formulation of general theories in natural language processing: theories about language that were developed without the specific problem of question answering in mind. By requiring programmers to be concerned with the precise form of information in memory, and the precise operations manipulating that information, they can uncover significant problems that would otherwise be overlooked. An early insight into artificial intelligence, today this reissue can be enjoyed in its historical context.

chapter 1|26 pages

Problems, Previews, and Programs

chapter 2|16 pages

Motivation and Background

part I|64 pages

Interpretation: Understanding Questions

chapter 3|28 pages

Conceptual Categories for Questions

part II|164 pages

Memory Searches: Finding an Answer

chapter 5|20 pages

Content Specification

chapter 6|24 pages

Searching Memory

chapter 7|14 pages

Focus Establishment

chapter 8|14 pages

What Did Not Happen

chapter 9|34 pages

Finding the Best Answer

chapter 10|30 pages

Conceptual Primitives for Physical Objects

chapter 11|12 pages

More Problems

chapter 12|8 pages

Perspective and Conclusions