CS 6740/INFO 6300 Advanced Language Technologies

Fall 2010

Time: Tuesdays and Thursdays, 1:25-2:40
Place: 320 Hollister
Instructor: Professor Claire Cardie, 5161 Upson Hall
Office hours: see top of Claire's home page


Course Management System (CMS): We'll be using the CS department course management system for submission of assignments, grading, etc.  You can get to CMS via the above link.  You'll need your Cornell netid and password.

Lectures and Assignments

Resources:

  • Lillian Lee's list of general NLP resources

  • NLP resources available locally are listed under the local resources link of the Cornell NLP home page.

Course Description
Graduate-level introduction to technologies for the computational treatment of information in human-language form, covering natural-language processing (NLP) and/or information retrieval (IR).

Possible Topics to be Covered
Introduction to NLP
Information extraction
Information retrieval models
Text categorization
Question answering
Summarization
Machine translation
Dialogue systems
Language modeling
Lexical semantics and word-sense disambiguation
Part-of-speech tagging
Parsing
Semantic analysis
Discourse processing
Coreference analysis
NL Generation

Reference Material
The text book for the course is: 

Daniel Jurafsky and James H. Martin, Speech and Language Processing, Prentice-Hall, 2008 (2nd edition)

Other useful references:

  • Christopher Manning and Hinrich Schutze. Foundations of Statistical NLP, MIT Press, 1999.
  • Robert Dale, Hermann Moisl and Harold Somers, eds. Handbook of Natural Langauge Processing, 2000.
  • Frederick Jelinek. Statistical Methods for Speech Recognition, MIT Press, 1998.

Grading
  • 40%: semester project
    problem description and summary of related work (5%), short presentation in class on the planned project (5%), progress report 1 (2.5%), progress report 2 (2.5%), in-class presentation (10%), final report (15%).
  • 25%: participation 
    You'll be expected to participate in class discussion and class exercises or otherwise demonstrate an interest in the material studied in the course.
  • 33%: presentation of selected readings and research papers
    Questions to consider when reading the papers.

  • 2%: course evaluations

Academic Integrity
You are responsible for knowing and following Cornell's academic integrity policy. Absolute integrity is expected of every Cornell student in all academic undertakings; he/she must in no way misrepresent his/her work fraudulently or unfairly advance his/her academic status, or be a party to another student's failure to maintain academic integrity. The maintenance of an atmosphere of academic honor and the fulfillment of the provisions of this Code are the responsibilities of the students and faculty of Cornell University. Therefore, all students and faculty members shall refrain from any action that would violate the basic principles of this Code. Violation of the academic integrity policy will not be tolerated, and will result in an F in the course.

See the University Code of Academic Integrity.