Christopher Manning
homepage: | http://nlp.stanford.edu/~manning/ |
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Description
Christopher Manning works on systems and formalisms that can intelligently process and produce human languages. His research concentrates on probabilistic models of language and statistical natural language processing, information extraction, text understanding and text mining, constraint-based theories of grammar (HPSG and LFG) and probabilistic extensions of them, syntactic typology, computational lexicography (involving work in XML, XSL, and information visualization), and other topics in computational linguistics and machine learning. Together with Dan Klein, he received the ACL 2003 best paper award.
Associate Professor Stanford University Depts of Linguistics and Computer Science 2006-
Lectures:
tutorial![]() as author at Deep Learning Summer School, Montreal 2015, 8912 views |
tutorial![]() as author at Deep Learning Summer School, Montreal 2015, 19279 views |
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lecture![]() as author at Second ACM International Conference on Web Search and Data Mining - WSDM 2009, together with: Hector Garcia-Molina, Paul Heymann, Daniel Ramage, 6038 views |
lecture![]() as author at MIT World Series: Where Does Syntax Come From? Have We All Been Wrong?, 3313 views |
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lecture![]() as author at Workshop on Machine Learning and Cognitive Science of Language Acquisition, London 2007, 5772 views |