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Language - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Ryan C., Collins J.J., O'Neill M. Grammatical Evolution: Evoloving Programs for an Arbitrary Language In print ... Document Not in Databas ... Context Related Articles ; This paper is cited by the following papers: Grammatical Evolution: Solving Trigonometric Identities - Ryan, O'Neill (1998) (1 citation) Self...
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The primary meaning of the "arbitrariness of language" is that for the vast majority of words, there is no relationship between the sounds associated with the word and ... Why languages follow one or another strategy is also arbitrary, based not on any natural reasoning, but on the accidents of historical variation.
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CHAPTER I LANGUAGE - ARBITRARY OR INNATE ... The generally accepted view of those who study language professionally is that language is an arbitrary, ... At first sight, it might seem a highly academic question whether or not language is arbitrary, of interest only to linguisticians, etymologists and so on.
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Using a variable length linear genome to govern how a Backus Naur Form grammar definition is mapped to a program, expressions and programs of arbitrary complexity may be evolved.
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Secondly, this allows the evolution of programs in an arbitrary language with the representation of a program's syntax in the form of a grammar definition.
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Grammatical Evolution: Evolutionary Automatic Programming in an Arbitrary Language provides the first comprehensive introduction to Grammatical Evolution, a novel approach to Genetic Programming that adopts principles from molecular biology in a simple... ... Subtitle: Evolutionary Automatic Programming in an Arbitrary Language...
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