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Division of Informatics RESEARCH POSITION IN PROBABILISTIC NATURAL LANGUAGE PROCESSING This project in the Institute for Communicating and Collaborative Systems (ICCS) of the Division of Informatics is funded by EPSRC to investigate the use of Categorial Grammars to support wide coverage statistically guided natural language parsing. A large categorial lexicon will be induced from labelled treebank corpora and the project will extend head dependency-based techniques to the parsing of a wide variety of problematic constructions involving long-range dependencies, including relatives, parentheticals, non-constituent fragments, and varieties of coordinate structures. The parser will deliver both syntactic and semantic structure. Evaluation will be both by comparison to existing large coverage parsers using standard measures, and by application to information processing tasks. We seek an individual to join an existing team of staff and postgraduate students to assist development of such parsers and applications. The ideal candidate will hold a degree in Computational Linguistics, Computer Science, Linguistics, or Artificial Intelligence and have an in interest both in linguistic analysis and parsing technology. S/he will have practical experience in programming, developing grammars, parsers, and probability models, and analysing linguistic corpora. Salary scale: 16,286 - 18.185 pounds per annum. The post is for 3 years initially (subject to further funding). Additional information about The Division of Informatics http://www.informatics.ed.ac.uk/ ICCS http://www.iccs.informatics.ed.ac.uk/ and related groups such HCRC http://www.hcrc.ed.ac.uk/ and the Language Technology group http://www.ltg.ed.ac.uk/overview.htm is available from our website. Informal enquiries may be made to: Mark Steedman (steedmanMail to author|Respond to list|Read more issues|LINGUIST home page|Top of issuecogsci.ed.ac.uk) Please quote reference number 306195WW Further particulars are available from, and applications should be sent to: Personnel University of Edinburgh 9-16 Chambers Street Edinburgh, EH1 1HT Tel: 0131 650 2511 (24 hour answering service). Closing date for applications is 4 April 2000. Further Particulars for the post of research associate in probablistic natural language processing, ICCS, Division of Informatics, 2 Buccleuch Place, Edinburgh EH8 9LW This project in the Institute for Communicating and Collaborative Systems (ICCS) of the Division of Informatics is funded by EPSRC to investigate the use of Categorial Grammars to support wide coverage statistically guided natural language parsing. A large categorial lexicon will be induced from labelled treebank corpora and the project will extend head dependency-based techniques to the parsing of a wide variety of problematic constructions involving long-range dependencies, including relatives, parentheticals, non-constituent fragments, and varieties of coordinate structures. The parser will deliver both syntactic and semantic structure. Evaluation will be both by comparison to existing large coverage parsers using standard measures, and by application to information processing tasks. We seek an individual to join an existing team of staff and postgraduate students to assist development of such parsers and applications. The ideal candidate will hold a degree in Computational Linguistics, Computer Science, Linguistics, or Artificial Intelligence and have in interest both in linguistic analysis and parsing technology. S/he will have practical experience in programming, developing grammars, parsers, and probability models, and analysing linguistic corpora. Successful candidates will be hired on the AR1A researcher scale (16,286-18,185 pounds per annum) , depending on age and experience. They will be employed initially for a period of three years, starting as soon as possible. Additional information about The Division of Informatics http://www.informatics.ed.ac.uk/ ICCS http://www.iccs.informatics.ed.ac.uk/ and related groups such HCRC http://www.hcrc.ed.ac.uk/ and the Language Technology group http://www.ltg.ed.ac.uk/overview.htm is available from our website. The University The University of Edinburgh has a student population of around 15,000 and employs nearly 2,000 Academic and Related staff, and some 3,500 non-teaching staff in the Clerical, Technical and Manual categories. The main locations of the University are in the centre of the city (South Side) and at King's Buildings some 2.5 miles away. The Division of Informatics Informatics is the study of the structure, behaviour, and interactions of both natural and artificial computational systems. The Division was formed in 1998 by combining the Department of Computer Science, the Department of Artificial Intelligence, and the Centre for Cognitive Science. ICCS The Institute for Communicating and Collaborative Systems (ICCS) is dedicated to the pursuit of basic research into the nature of communication among humans and between humans and machines using text, speech, and graphics, and the design of interactive dialogue systems, using computational and algorithmic approaches, with applications including natural language processing, information retrieval and presentation, education, musical analysis, and instruction. The work of the Institute is crucially interdependent with work of units at Edinburgh outwith Informatics, notably the Linguistics, Philosophy, and Psychology Departments, with which it interacts via the cross faculty Human Communication Research Centre (HCRC). The members of ICCS comprise around forty-five academic and research staff doing basic and applied research in a wide range of topics in Cognitive Science, Artificial Intelligence, and Computer Science concerning dynamic aspects of cognition, including: computational syntax and semantics and their interaction in processing; human learning, human reasoning and psychologically realistic knowledge representation; the production and analysis of cooperative communication in a number of modalities including spoken and written text and dialogue, graphics design and multimedia, and music. The Language Technology Group pursues research within the Institute in a number of application domains, including instructional and educational systems, interactive information management systems and computer-assisted collaboration tools. Hours Fixed hours of attendance are not specified, you will be expected to work such hours, normally Monday to Friday, as are required from the proper discharge of your duties. The working week will average 35 hours. Part-time staff will be remunerated pro-rata to 35 hours. Application Procedure Please complete and return the Equal Opportunities Monitoring Form, and the Application Form to, Recruitment, The Personnel Department, 9-16 Chambers Street, Edinburgh, EH1 1HT by the closing date of 4 April 2000. We cannot guarantee to consider late applications. These particulars are issued by the Personnel Office, 9-16 Chambers Street, Edinburgh, EH1 1HT, and represent an accurate description of the duties at the time of writing, although this accuracy cannot be guaranteed. The University reserves the right to vary these particulars in making an appointment or to make no appointment at all. Neither in part nor in whole do these particulars form part of any contract between the University and any individual. This advert can also be found at: http://www.iccs.informatics.ed.ac.uk/vacancies/ Betty Huyhes Institute Secretary