Linguistics 567: Knowledge Engineering for NLP

An elective course in UW's Professional Master's in Computational Linguistics

Winter 2010

(Course websites from previous years: 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005)

Course Info

  • Required Text:
  • Software

    This software is available in the Treehouse. You can also install it on your home machines, but you'll need to be running linux. If you don't already have a linux machine, we suggest KNOPPIX+LKB.

    Instructor Info

    Links

    Syllabus

    Description

    Natural language processing (NLP) enables computers to make use of data represented in human language (including the vast quantities of data available on the web) and to interact with computers on human terms. Applications from machine translation to speech recognition and web-based information retrieval demand both precision and robustness from NLP technology. Meetings these demands will require better hand-built grammars of human languages combined with sophisticated statistical processing methods. This class focuses on the implementation of linguistic grammars, drawing on a combination of sound grammatical theory and engineering skills.

    Class meetings will alternate between lectures and discussion sessions. We will cover the implementation of constraints in morphology, syntax and semantics within a unification-based lexicalist framework of grammar. Weekly exercises will focus on building up an implemented grammar for a language of your choice (everyone must work on a different language, so be prepared to work with a language you don't know well!), based on the LinGO Grammar Matrix. At the end of the quarter, we will use the various grammars in a machine translation task.

    Prerequisites: Linguistics 566 or equivalent. No programming experience is required.

    Note: To request academic accommodations due to a disability, please contact Disabled Student Services, 448 Schmitz, 206-543-8924 (V/TTY). If you have a letter from Disabled Student Services indicating that you have a disability which requires academic accommodations, please present the letter to the instructor so we can discuss the accommodations you might need in this class.

    Requirements

    Weekly lab exercises, typically assigned on Mondays and due by Friday night. Course time on Wednesdays will be used for discussion of the exercises, so please work on them ahead of time and bring questions. Lab exercises will require write-ups to explain the phenomena as manifested in your language and how you implemented your analysis. Active class participation will be viewed favorably when it comes to grading.

    Everyone will complete Lab 1 individually, but students are expected to work in pairs starting with Lab 2. Partners will alternate doing the write up portion of the lab, and have the grades for the labs where they did the write up weighted more heavily in their final course grade.

    Lab exercises are to be turned in via Catalyst CollectIt

    Schedule of Topics and Assignments (may yet evolve)

    All course recordings will be posted on our common view page. If I'm slow to make them available there, please ping me over GoPost.
    DatesLectureLabDue dateReading
    1/4, 1/6 Overview, Introduction
    LKB Formalism 1/6 slides
    Lab 1: Getting to know the LKB and the Grammar Matrix; Choose languageDue: 1/8 Ch 1-3
    1/11, 1/13 Testsuites, [incr tsdb()] Lab 2: Testsuites/customization I: Word order, person/number/gender, pronouns, case, the rest of the NP, basic lexicon (full form) Due: 1/15Ch 4, 5
    (Optional: Oepen & Flickinger 1998)
    1/20
    (No class 1/18)
    The Grammar Matrix: Motivations, technical details Lab 3: Testsuites/customization II: Tense/aspect, agreement, other required affixes, negation, argument optionality, demonstratives, Due: 1/22Bender, Flickinger & Oepen 2002; Bender et al ms
    1/25, 1/27 Minimal Recursion Semantics Lab 4: Testsuites/customization III: Matrix yes-no questions, coordination, modification, non-verbal predicates, embedded clauses, information structure Due: 1/29Copestake, Flickinger, Pollard, and Sag, 2005
    2/1, 2/3 Modification, Discourse Status, Argument Optionality; Precision grammars and corpus data Lab 5: Modification, demonstratives, argument optionality Due: 2/5Borthen and Haugereid 2005, available through UW Library's Electronic Journals (Research on Language and Computation 3(2):221-246)
    (Optional: Baldwin et al 2005)
    2/8, 2/10 Clause types, illocutionary force Lab 6: Polar questions, embedded clauses, non-verbal predicatesDue: 2/12 
    2/17
    (no class 2/15)
    Negation, raising, control, argument composition Lab 7: I can eat glass. It doesn't hurt me.Due: 2/19 
    2/22, 2/24 Information structure Lab 8: Information structure Due: 2/26 
    3/1, 3/3 The LOGON MT architecture Lab 9: Grammar clean up; Transfer rules Due: 3/5Oepen et al 2007
    3/8, 3/10 The Grammar Matrix: Future directions Machine Translation Extravaganza
    Course evals
    Nope 


    ebender at u dot washington dot edu
    Last modified: Wed Mar 10 11:53:28 PST 2010