But you don't come here to hear about sweltering nights, you come to hear about papers. My list is actually pretty short this time. I'm not quite sure why that happened. Perhaps NAACL sucked up a lot of the really good stuff, or I went to the wrong sessions, or something. (Though my experience was echoed by a number of people (n=5) I spoke to after the conference.) Anyway, here are the things I found interesting.
my biased thoughts on the fields of natural language processing (NLP), computational linguistics (CL) and related topics (machine learning, math, funding, etc.)
24 July 2010
ACL 2010 Retrospective
ACL 2010 finished up in Sweden a week ago or so. Overall, I enjoyed my time there (the local organization was great, though I think we got hit with unexpected heat, so those of us who didn't feel like booking a room at the Best Western -- hah! why would I have done that?! -- had no A/C and my room was about 28-30 every night).
But you don't come here to hear about sweltering nights, you come to hear about papers. My list is actually pretty short this time. I'm not quite sure why that happened. Perhaps NAACL sucked up a lot of the really good stuff, or I went to the wrong sessions, or something. (Though my experience was echoed by a number of people (n=5) I spoke to after the conference.) Anyway, here are the things I found interesting.
But you don't come here to hear about sweltering nights, you come to hear about papers. My list is actually pretty short this time. I'm not quite sure why that happened. Perhaps NAACL sucked up a lot of the really good stuff, or I went to the wrong sessions, or something. (Though my experience was echoed by a number of people (n=5) I spoke to after the conference.) Anyway, here are the things I found interesting.
Lauri Karttunen, with whom we had a chat yesterday, has told that the hottest topic in Uppsala was sentiment detection. Did you have a similar impression and have you seen anything worthwhile on that matter?
ReplyDeleteDue to this, the commettee might have rejected papers on other not-as-hot NLP topics, like machine translation.
@D_K: I didn't see many (any?) sentiment papers, so it's hard to say... I wasn't actively avoiding them, but they just didn't pique my interest enough to drag me out of another session. I think there were fewer parsing and MT sessions than in the past, which I can unequivocally say that I think is a good thing. Diversity is good.
ReplyDeleteNice list, Hal! Just to add to it, I also enjoyed the following papers:
ReplyDeletea) Fine-Grained Tree-to-String Translation Rule Extraction (Xianchao Wu; Takuya Matsuzaki; Jun’ichi Tsujii) - statistical machine translation with HPSG.
b) Bootstrapping Semantic Analyzers from Non-Contradictory Texts (Ivan Titov; Mikhail Kozhevnikov) - a very interesting and challenging unsupervised semantic parsing problem.
c) Dynamic Programming for Linear-Time Incremental Parsing (Liang Huang; Kenji Sagae) - the title says it all.
d) Combining Data and Mathematical Models of Language Change (Morgan Sonderegger; Partha Niyogi) - models the evolution of stress change in English noun/verb pairs (e.g. "contract", "protest")
Hello,
ReplyDeleteI am a student from India pursuing my undergraduate studies in Computer Science and plan to do my MS from a foreign university in the field of NLP. Could you please tell me some of the universities which provide an MS program in this field?
Hoping to get some guidance from you on this matter.
Thanks! :)
@kevin: thanks, those sound interesting and i dont' think i saw any of them!
ReplyDelete@shrey: a good place to start might be here: http://aclweb.org/aclwiki/index.php?title=List_of_NLP/CL_courses ... of course, i have to say that obviously the best place to go is UMD :).
Thanks! :)
ReplyDeleteIf it isn't a lot to ask, could you also brief me on what universities look for in an application? Is it just recommendations, projects and the statement of purpose, or something else too?