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Re: [nl-uiuc] Upcoming talk at the AIIS seminar (this Thursday).


Chronological Thread 
  • From: "Alexandre Klementiev" <klementi AT uiuc.edu>
  • To: nl-uiuc AT cs.uiuc.edu, aivr AT cs.uiuc.edu, dais AT cs.uiuc.edu, cogcomp AT cs.uiuc.edu, vision AT cs.uiuc.edu, krr-group AT cs.uiuc.edu
  • Subject: Re: [nl-uiuc] Upcoming talk at the AIIS seminar (this Thursday).
  • Date: Wed, 5 Mar 2008 11:35:11 -0600
  • List-archive: <http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/nl-uiuc>
  • List-id: Natural language research announcements <nl-uiuc.cs.uiuc.edu>

Dear students,

Student meeting with Jacob has been rescheduled to 4pm today (3/5), room 3401 SC.

Sorry for such a short notice,
Alex.

On Tue, Mar 4, 2008 at 1:54 PM, Alexandre Klementiev <klementi AT uiuc.edu> wrote:
Dear faculty and students,

Jacob Eisenstein, who has been offered a 2008 Beckman Postdoctoral Fellow appointment, will give a talk (details below) at the AIIS seminar this Thursday.  Student meeting with Jacob is scheduled for 2:30pm on March 6th in 3403 SC.


Thank you,
Alex


Title: Giving Discourse Processing a Hand: Gesture cues for Discourse Structure
Speaker:
Jacob Eisenstein, MIT
Date: Mar. 6th, 4:00pm
Location: Siebel 3405


Abstract:

Computers cannot fully understand spoken language without access to the wide range of modalities that accompany speech. My research addresses the particularly expressive modality of hand gesture, and focuses on building structured statistical models at the intersection of speech, vision, and meaning. While individual gestures may be idiosyncratic and thus difficult to interpret, we can still leverage gesture to improve language understanding by identifying patterns between gestures, and hypothesizing similar patterns in the meaning of the associated speech. I will describe successful applications of this idea to resolve ambiguous noun phrases, improve topic segmentation, and create keyframe summaries of spoken language.

Bio:

Jacob Eisenstein is in the final year of his PhD studies at MIT, supervised by Regina Barzilay and Randall Davis.  His research interests include statistical natural language processing, multimodal interaction, and applications of computer vision.




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