
- Sponsor
- South Asian Studies Initiative @ CSAMES
- Speaker
- Andrew Ollett, University of Chicago
- Contact
- Ragini Chakraborty
- raginic2@illinois.edu
- Views
- 12
Context, from 7th century India to today
Andrew Ollett, University of Chicago
An essential feature of modern language models is the ability to take context into account. A word’s meaning changes according to the words it accompanies. Although the implementation of this concept is very new, the concept itself is very old — and in fact the earliest systematic account of contextual meaning comes from India of the 7th and 8th centuries, when the philosopher Prabhākara formulated a theory he called “the expression of relational meanings” (anvitābhidhāna). This presentation will give an overview of Prabhākara’s theory, refined by the 8th/9th c. philosopher Śālikanātha, and its connections to ways of thinking about and modeling meaning in contemporary machine learning.