One type is
syntactic ambiguity.
Nandita identified indirect cognitive benefits among average children using tests designed to introduce
syntactic ambiguity; the testing revealed that bilingual children employed more advanced cognitive and linguistic strategies to resolve such ambiguities than did monolingual children.
In this lesson, you will learn about: Lexical ambiguity
Syntactic ambiguity Punctuation - based ambiguity
Not exact matches
By splitting complex legal sentences into smaller segments, Hung et al. were able to more better determine the correct
syntactic structure and reduce
ambiguity.
For the AI and law community this could also contribute to consistent legal drafting, formalizing legislation through logical analysis and sorting through
syntactic and semantic
ambiguities to create «normalized logical versions can then be «run» on a computer.»