Graeme Hirst
University of Toronto
donotspam.gh@cs.toronto.edu
http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~gh

"Fine-grained differences and similarities in meanings"
01/06/06: 10:30 AM, webcast
11th Floor Large Conference Room
Host: Patrick Pantel, schedule
Abstract: Writing or speaking requires making choices from words and syntactic
constructions that have similar but not identical meanings. Are two
parties "foes" or "enemies"? Did John meet Mary or was Mary met by
John? An important component of language understanding is recognizing
the implications of the nuances in the speaker's or writer's choices.
I will describe our research on computational aspects of linguistic
nuance, focusing on the differentiation of near-synonyms and on the
consequences that arise for knowledge representation formalisms. In
addition, I will discuss how contemporary views of meaning in
computational linguistics need to be broadened to take into account the
choices that the speaker or writer makes.
About Graeme Hirst: Graeme Hirst is a professor of computer science at the University of
Toronto, whose research covers a broad but integrated range of topics
in computational linguistics, natural language understanding, and
related areas of cognitive science. He is the author of two
monographs: Anaphora in Natural Language Understanding (1981) and
Semantic Interpretation and the Resolution of Ambiguity (1987). Hirst
has received two awards for excellence in teaching, and has
supervised graduate students in more than 35 theses and dissertations,
four of which have been published as books.
Last updated: Mon Jun 19 17:44:06 2006
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