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Diyi Yang is a Chinese computer scientist and assistant professor of computer science at Stanford University.Her research combines linguistics and social sciences with machine learning [1] to build more socially-aware language technologies, [2] including user-centered text generation, and NLP for limited data settings [3] [4] like dialectal variation and low-resourced languages.
web.stanford.edu /~jurafsky / Daniel Jurafsky is a professor of linguistics and computer science at Stanford University , and also an author. With Daniel Gildea, he is known for developing the first automatic system for semantic role labeling (SRL).
The project's primary aim is to achieve cross-linguistic consistency of annotation, while still permitting language-specific extensions when necessary. The annotation scheme has it roots in three related projects: Stanford Dependencies, [2] Google universal part-of-speech tags, [3] and the Interset interlingua [4] for
Manning is the Thomas M. Siebel Professor in Machine Learning and a professor of Linguistics and Computer Science at Stanford University. He received a BA (Hons) degree majoring in mathematics, computer science, and linguistics from the Australian National University (1989) and a PhD in linguistics from Stanford (1994), under the guidance of ...
SQuAD (Stanford Question Answering Dataset [13]) v1.1 and v2.0; SWAG (Situations With Adversarial Generations [ 14 ] ). In the original paper, all parameters of BERT are finetuned, and recommended that, for downstream applications that are text classifications, the output token at the [CLS] input token is fed into a linear-softmax layer to ...
Edward Y. Chang is a computer scientist, academic, and author.He is an adjunct professor of Computer Science at Stanford University, [1] and Visiting Chair Professor of Bioinformatics and Medical Engineering at Asia University, since 2019.
Diab completed her M.Sc. in computer science with a major in machine learning and artificial intelligence at The George Washington University (1997) and her Ph.D. in computational linguistics at the University of Maryland, Linguistics Department and University of Maryland Institute for Advanced Computer Studies (UMIACS) in 2003, under the supervision of Philip Resnik.
She received her MA from Stanford University in 1997 and her PhD from Stanford in 2000 for her research on syntactic variation and linguistic competence in African American Vernacular English (AAVE). [ 8 ] [ 1 ] She was supervised by Tom Wasow and Penelope Eckert .