X-Git-Url: http://lambda.jimpryor.net/git/gitweb.cgi?p=lambda.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=topics%2F_week15_continuation_applications.mdwn;h=d13efa7f6ce12a7177bb9b2d139928d97f184152;hp=eeb397be625275817ba0856fb11f4eb3cae0f4e7;hb=962395be322717c215b557851b9a45863df11701;hpb=935fb6c127006b69a492ef8e04cdb52a44e88169 diff --git a/topics/_week15_continuation_applications.mdwn b/topics/_week15_continuation_applications.mdwn index eeb397be..d13efa7f 100644 --- a/topics/_week15_continuation_applications.mdwn +++ b/topics/_week15_continuation_applications.mdwn @@ -13,14 +13,14 @@ zippers, then as a monad. In this lecture, we will generalize continuations slightly beyond a monad, and then begin to outline some of the applications of monads. In brief, the generalization can be summarized in terms of types: instead of using a Kleisli arrow mapping -a type α to a continuized type α -> ρ -> ρ, we'll allow the result -types to differ, i.e., we'll map α to α -> β -> γ. This will be +a type α to a continuized type (α -> ρ) -> ρ, we'll allow the result +types to differ, i.e., we'll map α to (α -> β) -> γ. This will be crucial for some natural language applications. Many (though not all) of the applications are discussed in detail in Barker and Shan 2014, *Continuations in Natural Language*, OUP. -In terms of list zippers, the continuation of a focussed element in +In terms of list zippers, the continuation of a focused element in the list is the front part of the list. list zipper for the list [a;b;c;d;e;f] with focus on d: @@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ the list is the front part of the list. continuation In terms of tree zippers, the continuation is the entire context of -the focussed element--the entire rest of the tree. +the focused element--the entire rest of the tree. [drawing of a broken tree] @@ -45,15 +45,16 @@ We'll burn through that conceptual fog today. The natural thing to try would have been to defunctionalize the continuation-based solution using a tree zipper. But that would not have been easy, since the natural way to implement the doubling behavior of the shifty operator -would have been to simply copy the context provided by the zipper. +would have been to simply copy the context provided by the zipper. This would have produced two uncoordinated copies of the other shifty operator, and we'd have been in the situation described in class of having a reduction strategy that never reduced the number of shifty -operators below 2. +operators below 2. (There are ways around this limitation of tree zippers, +but they are essentially equivalent to the technique given just below.) Instead, we'll re-interpreting what the continuation monad was doing -in defunctionalized terms by using Quantifier Raising (a technique -from linguistics). +in more or less defunctionalized terms by using Quantifier Raising, a technique +from linguistics. But first, motivating quantifier scope as a linguistic application. @@ -69,7 +70,7 @@ a scope-taking expression to take scope. 2. For every x, [Ann put a copy of x's homeworks in her briefcase] The sentence in (1) can be paraphrased as in (2), in which the -quantificational DP *every student* takes scope over the rest of the sentence. +quantificational DP *everyone* takes scope over the rest of the sentence. Even if you suspect that there could be an analysis of (2) on which "every student's term paper" could denote some kind of mereological fusion of a set of papers, it is much more difficult to be satisfied @@ -103,11 +104,16 @@ Raising closely resembles the reduction rule for shift: Quantifier Raising: given a sentence [... [QDP] ...], build a new sentence [QDP (\x.[... [x] ...])]. +Here, QDP is a scope-taking quantificational DP. + Just to emphasize the similarity between QR and shift, we can use QR to provide insight into the tree task that mystified us earlier. + +
   .
 __|___
 |    |
@@ -118,11 +124,16 @@ a  __|___
       d  _|__
          |  |
          S  e
+
-First we QR the lower shift operator +First we QR the lower shift operator, replacing it with a variable and +abstracting over that variable. + +
    .
 ___|___
 |     |
@@ -137,11 +148,15 @@ S  ___|___
              d  _|__
                 |  |
                 x  e
+
Next, we QR the upper shift operator + +
    .
 ___|___
 |     |
@@ -160,10 +175,11 @@ S  ___|____
                     d  _|__
                        |  |
                        x  e
+
We then evaluate, using the same value for the shift operator proposed before: - shift = \k.k(k "") + S = shift = \k.k(k "") It will be easiest to begin evaluating this tree with the lower shift operator (we get the same result if we start with the upper one). @@ -171,8 +187,11 @@ The relevant value for k is (\x.a(y(d(x e)))). Then k "" is a(y(d(""(e)))), and k(k "") is a(y(d((a(y(d(""(e)))))(e)))). In tree form: + +
    .
 ___|___
 |     |
@@ -195,13 +214,17 @@ S  ___|____
                     d  __|__
                        |   |
                        ""  e
+
Repeating the process for the upper shift operator replaces each occurrence of y with a copy of the whole tree. + +
       .
       |
 ______|______
@@ -234,11 +257,13 @@ a  ___|____           |      |
                                  d  __|__
                                     |   |
                                     ""  e
+
-The yield of this tree (the sequence of leaf nodes) is aadadeedaadadeedee. +The yield of this tree (the sequence of leaf nodes) is +aadadeedaadadeedee, which is the expected output of the double-shifted tree. -Exercise: the result is different, by the way, if the QR occurs in a -different order. +Exercise: the result is different, by the way, if the QR occurs in the +opposite order. Three lessons: @@ -247,7 +272,9 @@ Three lessons: dramatic increase in power and complexity. * Operators that - compose multiple copies of a context can be hard to understand. + compose multiple copies of a context can be hard to understand + (though keep this in mind when we see the continuations-based + analysis of coordination, which involves context doubling). * When considering two-sided, tree-based continuation operators, quantifier raising is a good tool for visualizing (defunctionalizing) @@ -284,15 +311,14 @@ manipulates a list of information. It is natural to imagine separating a box into two regions, the payload and the hidden scratch space: - _______________ _______________ _______________ - | [x->2, y->3] | | [x->2, y->3] | | [x->2, y->3] | - ------------------- ------------------ ------------------ +
+    _______________               _______________            _______________ 
+    | [x->2, y->3] |	          | [x->2, y->3] |          | [x->2, y->3] |
+  ------------------- 	         ------------------        ------------------
     |              |     ¢        |              |    =     |              |
-    |    +2        |	          |     y        |	    |     5        |
-    |______________|	          |______________|	    |______________|
-
-
-(Imagine the + operation has been lifted into the Reader monad too.)
+    |    +2        |	          |     y        |          |     5        |
+    |______________|	          |______________|          |______________|
+
For people who are familiar with Discourse Representation Theory (Kamp 1981, Kamp and Reyle 1993), this separation of boxes into payload and @@ -308,14 +334,18 @@ We won't keep the outer box, but we will keep the horizontal line dividing main effects from side-effects. Tower convention for types: +
                                               γ | β
     (α -> β) -> γ can be equivalently written ----- 
                                                 α
+
Tower convention for values: +
                                            g[] 
     \k.g[k(x)] can be equivalently written ---
                                             x
+
If \k.g[k(x)] has type (α -> β) -> γ, then k has type (α -> β). @@ -328,12 +358,15 @@ individuals) and S (the type of truth values). Then in the spirit of monadic thinking, we'll have a way of lifting an arbitrary value into the tower system: - [] γ|β - LIFT (x:α) = \k.kx : (α -> β) -> γ == --- : --- - x α + [] β|β + LIFT (x:α) = \k.kx : (α -> β) -> β == -- : --- + x α Obviously, LIFT is exactly the midentity (the unit) for the continuation monad. -The name comes from Partee's 1987 theory of type-shifters for +Notice that LIFT requires the result type of the continuation argument +and the result type of the overall expression to match (here, both are β). + +The name LIFT comes from Partee's 1987 theory of type-shifters for determiner phrases. Importantly, LIFT applied to an individual-denoting expression yields the generalized quantifier proposed by Montague as the denotation for proper names: @@ -346,6 +379,14 @@ So if the proper name *John* denotes the individual j, LIFT(j) is the generalized quantifier that maps each property k of type DP -> S to true just in case kj is true. +Crucially for the discussion here, LIFT does not apply only to DPs, as +in Montague and Partee, but to any expression whatsoever. For +instance, here is LIFT applied to a lexical verb phrase: + + [] S|S + LIFT (left:DP\S) = \k.kx : (DP\S -> S) -> S == ---- : --- + left DP + Once we have expressions of type (α -> β) -> γ, we'll need to combine them. We'll use the ¢ operator from the continuation monad: @@ -372,6 +413,16 @@ operator: Not a monad (Wadler); would be if the types were Neverthless, obeys the monad laws. +Oh, one more thing: because natural language allows the functor to be +on the left or on the right, we replace the type arrow -> with a +left-leaning version \ and a right-leaning version, as follows: + + α/β β = α + β β\α = α + +This means we need two versions of ¢ too (see Barker and Shan 2014 +chapter 1 for full details). + This is (almost) all we need to get some significant linguistic work done.