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[nl-uiuc] AIIS Talk by Chris Ré -- Friday Feb 10 @ 2pm


Chronological Thread 
  • From: Yonatan Bisk <bisk1 AT illinois.edu>
  • To: nl-uiuc AT cs.uiuc.edu, aivr AT cs.uiuc.edu, vision AT cs.uiuc.edu, eyal AT cs.uiuc.edu, aiis AT cs.uiuc.edu, aistudents AT cs.uiuc.edu, Girju, Corina R <girju AT illinois.edu>, Catherine Blake <clblake AT illinois.edu>, Efron, Miles James <mefron AT illinois.edu>
  • Subject: [nl-uiuc] AIIS Talk by Chris Ré -- Friday Feb 10 @ 2pm
  • Date: Mon, 6 Feb 2012 12:25:05 -0600
  • List-archive: <http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/nl-uiuc>
  • List-id: Natural language research announcements <nl-uiuc.cs.uiuc.edu>

– Schedule Meetings --
please email (
rsamdan2 AT uiuc.edu
or
bisk1 AT illinois.edu
)
your availability if you are interested in a meeting this Friday

-- Calendars Reminder --
All AIIS talks are posted to
http://cogcomp.cs.illinois.edu/sites/aiis/index.html and
http://illinois.edu/calendar/list/3407



-- This weeks talk --
Speaker: Chris Ré of University of Wisconsin-Madison

When: Friday, Feb 10, 2pm.

Where: 3405 Siebel Center

Talk: Scaling Markov Logic to 500 Million Documents

Abstract:
The main question driving my research is: how does one deploy statistical
data-analysis tools to enhance data-driven systems? Our goal is to find
abstractions that one needs to deploy and maintain such systems. My group is
attacking this question by building a diverse set of statistical data-driven
applications: a Machine Reading system whose goal is to read the Web and
answer complex questions, a muon detector for a neutrino telescope called
IceCube in collaboration with physicists, and querying over rich content (OCR
and speech data) in collaboration with social-scientists. Even in this
diverse set, we have found common abstractions that we are exploiting to
build systems.

In the technical portion of the talk, I will discuss our framework for a
language called Markov Logic (think: logic queries with weights) that we have
been using to build text-processing applications. A key feature of Markov
Logic is that it allows the developer to express rules that are likely, but
not certain, to be correct. This has allowed Markov-Logic-based approaches to
achieve state-of-the-art quality on challenging tasks like Machine Reading. A
key challenge is that previous implementations of Markov Logic have been
confined to hundreds of documents; in contrast, I will describe the
techniques that we use to process over 500 million documents with Markov
Logic.

Video demos, papers, software, virtual machines containing installations of
our software with data, and links to applications that are discussed in this
talk are available from http://www.cs.wisc.edu/hazy.


- Yonatan -




  • [nl-uiuc] AIIS Talk by Chris Ré -- Friday Feb 10 @ 2pm, Yonatan Bisk, 02/06/2012

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