Gerhard Jäger

Orcid: 0000-0002-9642-9359

Affiliations:
  • University of Tübingen, Institute of Linguistics, Tübingen, Germany


According to our database1, Gerhard Jäger authored at least 32 papers between 1996 and 2026.

Collaborative distances:
  • Dijkstra number2 of five.
  • Erdős number3 of four.

Timeline

Legend:

Book  In proceedings  Article  PhD thesis  Dataset  Other 

Links

Online presence:

On csauthors.net:

Bibliography

2026
Hard to Be Heard: Phoneme-Level ASR Analysis of Phonologically Complex, Low-Resource Endangered Languages.
CoRR, April, 2026

2025
Beyond cognacy.
CoRR, July, 2025

Computational Typology.
CoRR, April, 2025

2024
Computational Approaches for Integrating out Subjectivity in Cognate Synonym Selection.
CoRR, 2024

Are Sounds Sound for Phylogenetic Reconstruction?
Proceedings of the 6th Workshop on Research in Computational Linguistic Typology and Multilingual NLP, 2024

Exploring the evolutionary dynamics of sound symbolism.
Proceedings of the 46th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, 2024

2021
Phylogenetic typology.
CoRR, 2021

2020
NorthEuraLex: a wide-coverage lexical database of Northern Eurasia.
Lang. Resour. Evaluation, 2020

2018
Computational Historical Linguistics.
CoRR, 2018

Global-scale phylogenetic linguistic inference from lexical resources.
CoRR, 2018

Are Automatic Methods for Cognate Detection Good Enough for Phylogenetic Reconstruction in Historical Linguistics?
Proceedings of the 2018 Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies, 2018

2017
Fast and unsupervised methods for multilingual cognate clustering.
CoRR, 2017

Using support vector machines and state-of-the-art algorithms for phonetic alignment to identify cognates in multi-lingual wordlists.
Proceedings of the 15th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics, 2017

2016
Automatic cognate classification with a Support Vector Machine.
Proceedings of the 13th Conference on Natural Language Processing, 2016

2013
Cost-Based Pragmatic Inference about Referential Expressions.
Proceedings of the 35th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, 2013

2012
Using Statistics for Cross-linguistic Semantics: A Quantitative Investigation of the Typology of Colour Naming Systems.
J. Semant., 2012

Bidirectional Optimization from Reasoning and Learning in Games.
J. Log. Lang. Inf., 2012

Power Laws and Other heavy-Tailed Distributions in Linguistic Typology.
Adv. Complex Syst., 2012

2011
Language, Games, and Evolution: An Introduction.
Proceedings of the Language, Games, and Evolution, 2011

Voronoi languages: Equilibria in cheap-talk games with high-dimensional types and few signals.
Games Econ. Behav., 2011

Investigating the effects of prestige on the diffusion of linguistic variants.
Proceedings of the 33th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, 2011

2010
Vagueness, Signaling and Bounded Rationality.
Proceedings of the New Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence, 2010

2009
Natural Color Categories Are Convex Sets.
Proceedings of the Logic, Language and Meaning - 17th Amsterdam Colloquium, 2009

2008
Applications of Game Theory in Linguistics.
Lang. Linguistics Compass, 2008

2007
Language structure: psychological and social constraints.
Synth., 2007

2003
Recursion by optimization: on the complexity of bidirectional optimality theory.
Nat. Lang. Eng., 2003

2002
Some Notes on the Formal Properties of Bidirectional Optimality Theory.
J. Log. Lang. Inf., 2002

Residuation, Structural Rules and Context Freeness.
Proceedings of the Sixth International Workshop on Tree Adjoining Grammar and Related Frameworks, 2002

2001
Topic‐Comment Structure and the Contrast Between Stage Level and Individual Level Predicates.
J. Semant., 2001

Lambek Grammars as Combinatory Categorial Grammars.
Log. J. IGPL, 2001

1998
Anaphora and Quantification in Categorial Grammar.
Proceedings of the Logical Aspects of Computational Linguistics, 1998

1996
Topics in dynamic semantics.
PhD thesis, 1996


  Loading...