Marcus Contextual Grammars is the first monograph to present a class
of grammars introduced about three decades ago, based on the fundamental
linguistic phenomenon of strings-contexts interplay (selection). Most of
the theoretical results obtained so far about the many variants of
contextual grammars are presented with emphasis on classes of questions
with relevance for applications in the study of natural language syntax:
generative powers, descriptive and computational complexity, automata
recognition, semilinearity, structure of the generated strings,
ambiguity, regulated rewriting, etc. Constant comparison with families
of languages in the Chomsky hierarchy is made. Connections with
non-linguistic areas are established, such as molecular computing.
Audience: Researchers and students in theoretical computer science
(formal language theory and automata theory), computational linguistics,
mathematical methods in linguistics, and linguists interested in formal
models of syntax