Victor Yngve
#9,166
Most Influential Person Now
Computational linguist
Victor Yngve's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
Victor Yngvecomputer-science Degrees
Computer Science
#732
World Rank
#754
Historical Rank
#394
USA Rank
Computational Linguistics
#16
World Rank
#16
Historical Rank
#5
USA Rank
Database
#885
World Rank
#930
Historical Rank
#269
USA Rank
Victor Yngvecommunications Degrees
Communications
#596
World Rank
#971
Historical Rank
#330
USA Rank
Linguistics
#124
World Rank
#176
Historical Rank
#68
USA Rank
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Computer Science Communications
Victor Yngve's Degrees
- PhD Linguistics University of Pennsylvania
- Masters Linguistics University of Pennsylvania
- Bachelors Linguistics University of Pennsylvania
Why Is Victor Yngve Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Victor H. Yngve was a professor of linguistics at the University of Chicago and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology . He was one of the earliest researchers in computational linguistics and natural language processing, the use of computers to analyze and process languages. He created the first program to produce random but well-formed output sentences, given a text, a children's book called Engineer Small and the Little Train.
Victor Yngve's Published Works
Published Works
- On getting a word in edgewise (1970) (934)
- A model and an hypothesis for language structure (1960) (593)
- From Grammar to Science: New Foundations for General Linguistics (1996) (68)
- Foundations of cognitive grammar volume I. Theoretical prerequisites: By Ronald W. Langacker. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1987, xii + 516pp (1989) (48)
- A programming language for mechanical translation (1958) (31)
- A framework for syntactic translation (1957) (29)
- Computer Programs for Translation (1962) (24)
- From Grammar to Science (1996) (21)
- Linguistics as a Science (2021) (19)
- Random generation of English sentences (1961) (17)
- THE TRANSITION TEMPERATURES OF STRONTIUM CHLORIDE AND STRONTIUM BROMIDE AS FIXED POINTS IN THERMOMETRY. (17)
- Implications of mechanical translation research (1964) (14)
- Early research at M.I.T.: in search of adequate theory (2000) (13)
- Computer Programming with COMIT II (1972) (12)
- Gap analysis and syntax (1956) (11)
- Sentence-for-sentence translation (1955) (10)
- Hard-science linguistics (2004) (10)
- THE TIME VARIATION OF COSMIC-RAY HEAVY NUCLEI (1953) (8)
- COMIT as an IR language (1962) (8)
- Toward better documentation of programming languages (1963) (8)
- 5. The Depth Hypothesis (1996) (6)
- THE SOLUBILITY OF SODIUM SULFATE AS A MEANS OF DETERMINING TEMPERATURES. (6)
- THE STRENGTHS OF COBALTAMMINE BASES AND WERNER'S THEORY OF BASES. (1921) (5)
- THE TRANSLATION OF LANGUAGES BY MACHINE (1956) (4)
- Issues in hard-science linguistics (2002) (4)
- The technical feasibility of translating languages by machine (1956) (4)
- The COMIT system for mechanical translation (1959) (4)
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology Presentation (1960) (4)
- The Struggle for a Theory of Native Speaker (1981) (4)
- The machine and the man (1954) (4)
- Letter to the Editor: Clues from the Depth Hypothesis: A Reply to Geoffrey Sampson’s Review (1998) (3)
- LINGUISTICS AMONG THE SCIENCES (1986) (3)
- Depth and the Historical Change of the English Genitive (1975) (3)
- COMIT (1963) (2)
- The East-West Asymmetry of the Hard Component of the Cosmic Radiation (1948) (2)
- Two foundations for linguistics briefly compared (1998) (2)
- The Feasibility of Machine Searching of English Texts (2011) (2)
- Formalizing the observer in hard-science linguistics (2006) (2)
- Our Double Anniversary (1982) (2)
- The Latitude Effect of the Hard Component as a Function of Altitude (1947) (2)
- Discussants (1973) (1)
- Comments on M.H. Bickhard and R.L. Campbell, ‘some foundational questions concerning language studies’ (1992) (1)
- Linguistics without signs? Thing, concept, and name in hard-science linguistics (2005) (1)
- The COMIT system (1960) (1)
- THE ABSORPTION CURVE OF THE COSMIC RADIATION IN THE STRATOSPHERE (1952) (1)
- Terminology in the Light of Research on Mechanical Translation (1956) (1)
- A Logarithmic Barometer (1954) (1)
- Book Review:Fortran Techniques with Special Reference to Non-Numerical Applications A. Colin Day (1973) (1)
- Invited papers: Toward better programming languages (1962) (1)
- In Defense of English (2011) (1)
- Machines for the Translation of Languages (1955) (1)
- 1. People, Sound Waves, and Illusions (1996) (0)
- 16. The Group in Its Environment (1996) (0)
- ICR QUARTERLY REPORT NUMBER 12 (1967) (0)
- 9. Plans for Emigrating to the New World (1996) (0)
- 7. Opportunities in the Physical Domain (1996) (0)
- SOME APPLICATIONS OF COMPUTERS IN LINGUISTICS * (2010) (0)
- Early research at M.I.T. (2000) (0)
- The technical feasibility of translating languages by machine (1956) (0)
- Delavenay, Emile: An Introduction to Machine Translation (1962) (0)
- Volume Information (1975) (0)
- Something Old and Something New (1997) (0)
- 3. Should We Study Language or People (1996) (0)
- MT at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1960) (0)
- Computer Programs for Translation A simple model for sentence construction , devised as a first step toward mechanical translation , is beginning to show why English and other languages are so ingeniously complicated (2010) (0)
- 21. Evidence for the Structure of Context (1996) (0)
- ICR QUARTERLY REPORT NUMBER 14. (1967) (0)
- Green cheese and the burden of proof in science (1990) (0)
- ICR QUARTERLY REPORT NUMBER 13. (1967) (0)
- 19. Notations for the Control of Selection (1996) (0)
- 11. Properties in Theories of People (1996) (0)
- 17. Types of Interaction between Groups (1996) (0)
- 6. How Can We Know What to Believe (1996) (0)
- 10. Linguistic Theories of People (1996) (0)
- Grammaticality judgements and the garden-path dilemma in linguistic research (1994) (0)
- Mechanical Resolution of Linguistic Problems . Andrew D. Booth, L. Brandwood, J. P. Cleave. Academic Press, New York; Butterworths, London, 1958. vii + 306 pp. Illus. $9.80. (1958) (0)
- 12. Laws of Communicative Behavior (1996) (0)
- 14. Linguistic Theories of Groups (1996) (0)
- 8. Standard Science (1996) (0)
- Volume Information (1979) (0)
- ICR QUARTERLY REPORT NUMBER 15. (1967) (0)
- 36. Early MT Research at M.I.T.: The Search for Context (2000) (0)
- A Model for Mechanical Translation (2006) (0)
- Mechanical Translation Research at MIT (1956) (0)
- 18. The Structure of Communities (1996) (0)
- THE LIBRARY QUARTERLY (2008) (0)
- 15. Relations between Individuals and Groups (1996) (0)
- [From: Journal of Communication, vol.5, part 2, 1955] MACHINES FOR THE TRANSLATION OF LANGUAGES (2010) (0)
- What can we believe these days ? : can linguistics actually be scientific ? (1993) (0)
- PEOPLE, ORTHOCONCEPTS, AND DIALOG (2009) (0)
- Human Memory and Knowledge: A Systems Approach. Glynn Harmon (1974) (0)
- On the order of clauses (1963) (0)
- Volume Information (1982) (0)
- Volume Information (1978) (0)
- Book Reviews: Mechanical Resolution of Linguistic Problems (1958) (0)
- 22. How Individuals Cope in Communities (1996) (0)
- Panel "Appelate Function, Judicial Decision, and the Role of the Judiciary," National Law and Electronics Conference, Lake Arrowhead, California (1962) (0)
- Further rewards from formalizing the observer (2007) (0)
- 13. A Scientifically Justified Notation (1996) (0)
- A précis of hard-science phonetics-phonology (2003) (0)
- Explorations in human linguistics analysis : An Alzheimer's study (1996) (0)
- 2. Traditions of Grammar and Science (1996) (0)
- 20. Notations for the Control of Sequence (1996) (0)
- ICR QUARTERLY REPORT NUMBER 16. (1968) (0)
- 4. The Problem with Theories of Language (1996) (0)
- The Outlook for Mechanical Translation (1956) (0)
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