What's New

Our department will hold a meeting for prospective students and "open labs" on May 10th 2014:(4/30)

  • "open lab" will be held at 11:00-12:30 and 15:30-18:00.

We will present a paper at ACL2014(6/22-27):(4/18)

  • M. Shen, H. Liu, D. Kawahara, S. Kurohashi: Chinese Morphological Analysis with Character-level POS Tagging (Short Paper)

Chu received the "Best student paper award" at CICLing2014 with the following paper:(4/16)

  • C. Chu, T. Nakazawa, S. Kurohashi:
    Iterative Bilingual Lexicon Extraction from Comparable Corpora with Topical and Contextual Knowledge
    CICLing_Chu.jpg

We will present a paper at ACL2014(6/22-27):(4/16)

  • J. Richardson, F. Cromieres, T. Nakazawa and S. Kurohashi:
    KyotoEBMT: An Example-Based Dependency-to-Dependency Translation Framework (System Demonstration)

New members joined our lab:(4/1)

  • Dr. Morita and Dr. Hayashibe joined our lab as researchers.
  • Three M1 students and five B4 students joined our lab.

We will present a paper at ACL2014(6/22-27):(3/6)

  • D. Kawahara, D. W. Peterson and M. Palmer:
    A Step-wise Usage-based Method for Inducing Polysemy-aware Verb Classes

We held a ski tour to Shigakogen(2/22-23):

lab_ski_2014.JPG

Research Overview

Language is the most reliable medium of human intellectual activities. Our objective is to establish the technology and academic discipline for handling and understanding language, in a manner that is as close as possible to that of humans, using computers. These include syntactic language analysis, semantic analysis, context analysis, text comprehension, text generation and dictionary systems to develop various application systems for machine translation and information retrieval.

Search Engine Infrastructure based on Deep Natural Language Processing

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The essential purpose of information retrieval is not to retrieve just a relevant document but to acquire the information or knowledge in the document. We have been developing a next-generation infrastructure of information retrieval on the basis of the following techniques of deep natural language processing: precise processing based not on words but on predicate-argument structures, identifying the variety of linguistic expressions and providing a bird's-eye view of search results via clustering and interaction.

Machine Translation

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To bring automatic translation by computers to the level of human translation, we have been studying next-generation methodology of machine translation on the basis of text understanding and a large collection of translation examples. We have already accomplished practical translation on the domain of travel conversation, and constructed a translation-aid system that can be used by experts of patent translation.

Fundamental Studies on Text Understanding

To make computers understand language, it is essential to give computers world knowledge. This was a very hard problem ten years ago, but it has become possible to acquire knowledge from a massive amount of text in virtue of the drastic progress of computing power and network. We have successfully acquired linguistic patterns of predicate-argument structures from automatic parses of 7 billion Japanese sentences crawled from the Web using grid computing machines. By utilizing such knowledge, we study text understanding, i.e., recognizing the relationships between words and phrases in text.

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