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Functional Grammar is a linguistic theory in which language is
regarded intrinsically as a vehicle of communicative interaction.
As such it has a strongly pragmatic orientation, and this book
presents the results of some of the most recent research into
pragmatics within the Functional Grammar framework. A good deal of
attention is paid, in particular, to the treatment of
discourse-level phenomena. manifestations.
Linguistic Concepts and Methods in CSCW is the first book devoted
to the innovative new area of research in CSCW. It concentrates on
the use of language in context - the area most widely researched in
conjunction with CSCW - but also examines grammatical construction,
semantics and the significance of the spoken, written and graphic
mediums. A variety of other related topics, such as
sociolinguistics, stylistics, psycholinguistics, computational
linguistics, and applied linguistics are also covered.
This book will be of interest to researchers in CSCW, linguistics
and computational linguistics. It will also provide invaluable
reading for industrial and commercial researchers who are
interested in the implications of such research for the design of
marketable systems.
Computing, despite the relative brevity of its history, has already
evolved into a subject in which a fairly large number of
subdisciplines can be identified. Moreover, there has been a
noticeable tendency for the different branches of the subject each
to develop its own intellectual culture, tradition and momentum.
This is not, of course, to suggest that any individ ual
subdiscipline has become a watertight compartment or that
developments in one branch of the subject have tended to take place
in total isolation from developments in other related areas.
Nevertheless, it does mean that a deliberate effort is required in
order to bring different subdisciplines together in a fruitful and
beneficial manner. Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Computer
Supported Coopera tive Work (CSCW) jointly constitute a good
example of two branches of computing that have emerged separately
and given rise to largely distinct research communities and
initiatives. On the one hand, the history of AI can be traced back
to the 1950s, the term II Artificial Intelligence" being generally
attributed to John McCarthy, who first used it in print in 1956.
"Computer Supported Cooperative Work," on the other hand, is a term
of more recent coinage, having'been devised by Irene Greif and Paul
Cashman in 1984."
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