Koen G > Yesterday, 10:10 AM
Patrick Feaster Wrote:Do spaces ever convey any information that could be required for interpreting the text, or are they wholly predictable?
Patrick Feaster Wrote:it’s likely no coincidence that the glyph pairs with the highest incidences of unexpected behavior also tend to have relatively high proportions of ambiguous word breaks represented in the Zandbergen transcription, i.e., what I call “comma breaks,”
quimqu > Yesterday, 10:13 AM
(Yesterday, 09:48 AM)nablator Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.(14-11-2025, 11:41 PM)quimqu Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.If the spaces were decorative or had no function, the model should not be able to recover them with this level of accuracy.
On the contrary, the more predictable they are, the less information they can carry. 100% predictable = 100% useless.
rikforto > Yesterday, 10:25 AM
(Yesterday, 10:10 AM)Koen G Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Patrick Feaster Wrote:Do spaces ever convey any information that could be required for interpreting the text, or are they wholly predictable?
My question would be: does the predictable writing system cause predictable spaces, or do spaces make the writing system more predictable? In the first case, spaces are spaces. In the second case, they may be something else.
Koen G > Yesterday, 10:57 AM
quimqu > Yesterday, 10:59 AM
Philipp Harland > Yesterday, 11:08 AM
(Yesterday, 10:57 AM)Koen G Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Let's simplify and say that some glyphs or glyph clusters only appear at word end. Think n, edy... Because for some reason these dominate the ends of words, they also make the occurrence of spaces predictable, because a space follows word end. In this case you could say that spaces are perfectly normal: they are only predictable because the "words" themselves don't provide many different contexts for spaces to appear in.
In the second scenario, blank space is inserted in a predictable way. It is the use of blank space that makes "words" appear even more predictable than they were.
The result may be exactly the same, but the underlying system and the way we may think about spaces is different.
rikforto > Yesterday, 11:13 AM
Mark Knowles > Yesterday, 12:08 PM
ReneZ > Yesterday, 01:06 PM
quimqu > Yesterday, 01:56 PM