Linguistics 384
Language and Computers
Autumn 2005
In the past decade, the widening use of computers has had a profound
influence on the way ordinary people communicate, search and store
information. For the overwhelming majority of people and situations,
the natural vehicle for such information is natural language. Text and
to a lesser extent speech are crucial encoding formats for the
information revolution.
In this course, you will be given insight into the fundamentals of how
computers are used to represent, process and organize textual and
spoken information, as well as tips on how to effectively integrate
this knowledge into working practice. We will cover the theory and
practice of human language technology. Topics include text encoding,
search technology, tools for writing support, machine translation,
dialog systems, computer aided language learning and the social
context of language technology.
Xiaofei Lu
218 Oxley Hall
292-3802
xflu AT ling DOT osu DOT edu (replace AT and DOT accordingly and
remove spaces)
| T |
2:30pm-3:18pm |
| R |
2:30pm-3:18pm |
TR 3:30pm-5:18pm
040 Page Hall
http://ling.osu.edu/~xflu/384
5
none
There is no textbook for this course, but there will be online readings
assigned periodically (see course links page at http://ling.osu.edu/~xflu/384/384links.html).
I will distribute slides in class for each unit. These will also be
available on the web after the class in which they are first
distributed. These slides are meant to aid classroom discussion and
cannot replace actually being in class.
There will be various reading selections throughout the quarter, but
most of the material will be introduced solely in the classroom.
There will be roughly one online quiz per week, to ensure the
material covered in class is mastered. And there will be 5
homework assignments (exercise sheets). These assignments
give the opportunity to explore new aspects of the topics discussed in class.
Grades will be based on in-class activities (7%), participation (3%), quizzes (20%),
homeworks (30%), a midterm exam (20%), and a final examination
(20%).
| IN-CLASS ACTIVITIES |
7% |
|
| PARTICIPATION |
3% |
|
| QUIZZES |
20% (8@2.5% each) |
|
| HOMEWORKS |
30% (5@6% each) |
|
| MIDTERM |
20% |
|
| FINAL |
20% |
|
(Scores in percentages)
| A |
926-1000 |
B+ |
866-895 |
C+ |
766-795 |
D+ |
666-695 |
E |
0-595 |
| A- |
896-925 |
B |
826-865 |
C |
726-765 |
D |
596-665 |
|
|
| |
|
B- |
796-825 |
C- |
696-725 |
|
|
|
|
- ACTIVITIES: As you cannot participate if you are absent and as
they typically involve group discussions, there are strictly no make-ups for missed in-class activities.
- QUIZZES: Each student is allowed one chance to make up for one
quiz during the quarter. If you miss a quiz, you need to notify me
by email or in person that you want to use your chance to make up
for it. Strictly no more than one missed quizzes may be made up.
- HOMEWORKS: Unless accompanied with official documentation for an
acceptable reason (illness or family emergency), late submissions will
be subject to a one (1) letter grade (10 percentage points) penalty
for every 24 hour period after the turn-in time. I do not promise to
remind you to submit such documentation, but regardless of the reason,
this penalty will not be removed until official documentation has been
received.
- EXAMS: If you plan on rescheduling either the midterm or final, you
will have to provide extensive documentation for your excuse. See me
immediately if this is the case.
To state the obvious, academic dishonesty is not allowed. Cheating on
tests or on other assignments will be reported to the University
Committee on Academic Misconduct. The most common form of misconduct
is plagiarism. Remember that any time you use the ideas or the
materials of another person or persons, you must acknowledge that you
have done so in a citation. This includes material that you have found
on the Web. The University provides guidelines for research on the Web
at http://gateway.lib.ohio-state.edu/tutor/.
I expect you to respect one another, to respect me, and to respect
yourself. To that end, I expect you to obey the following rules:
- Do not read newspapers in class. Do not criticize others'
questions. Do not pack up early. Shut off your cell phone. If
for some reason, you must leave early or you have an important
call coming in, notify me before class.
- Participate: share experiences, ask questions, express your
opinions. Ask me to provide more information and see me during
office hours for help or clarification or recommendations for
further research.
- If you ever have a problem with the course or with me, I
prefer you see me during office hours (or schedule an
appointment). If, for some reason, you feel you cannot discuss
an issue with me, please take your concern to the TA Coordinator
(see below).
Students who need an accommodation based on the impact of a disability
should contact me to arrange an appointment as soon as possible to
discuss the course format, to anticipate needs, and to explore
potential accommodations. I rely on the Office of Disability Services
for assistance in verifying the need for accommodations and developing
accommodation strategies. Students who have not previously contacted
the Office for Disability Services are encouraged to do so
(614-292-3307; http://www.ods.ohio-state.edu).
Links to notes and homeworks will be posted after class at:
http://ling.osu.edu/~xflu/384/
| Month |
Week |
Day |
Date |
Topic |
What's due |
| September |
1 |
R |
22 |
Syllabus; Intro to class |
|
| |
2 |
T |
27 |
Text and speech encoding (Slides 1, ASCII table) |
|
| |
|
R |
29 |
Text and speech encoding (ICA1) |
Demo Quiz |
| October |
3 |
T |
4 |
Searching (Slides 2, HW1, ICA2) |
Quiz1 |
| |
|
R |
6 |
Searching |
|
| |
4 |
T |
11 |
Spam filtering (Slides 3, ICA3) |
HW1/Quiz2 |
| |
|
R |
13 |
Spam filtering (HW2) |
|
| |
5 |
T |
18 |
Spelling correctors (Slides 4, ICA4) |
Quiz3 |
| |
|
R |
20 |
Spelling correctors/Grammar correctors (Slides 5, ICA5) |
HW2 |
| |
6 |
T |
25 |
Review |
Quiz4 |
| |
|
R |
27 |
MIDTERM |
MIDTERM |
| November |
7 |
T |
1 |
Machine translation (Slides 6, laughs) |
|
| |
|
R |
3 |
Machine translation (ICA6) |
HW3 |
| |
8 |
T |
8 |
Machine translation (HW4, ICA7) |
Quiz5 |
| |
|
R |
10 |
Dialogue systems (Slides 7, ICA8) |
|
| |
9 |
T |
15 |
Dialogue systems (ICA9) |
HW4/Quiz6 |
| |
|
R |
17 |
Dialogue systems (HW5, ICA10) |
|
| |
10 |
T |
22 |
Computer-assisted language learning (CALL) (Slides 8,
ICA11) |
Quiz7 |
| |
|
R |
24 |
Happy Thanksgiving! |
|
| |
11 |
T |
29 |
Social context of language technology use (Slides 9, ICA12, discussion) |
HW5 |
| December |
|
R |
1 |
Final review |
Quiz8 |
| |
12 |
T |
6 |
FINAL |
FINAL |
If you find yourself loving this material, I encourage you to come see
me or to contact one of our computational linguistics faculty.
This syllabus is subject to change. All important changes will be
announced in class AND communicated by email, with ample time for adjustment.
This document was generated using the
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Copyright © 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996,
Nikos Drakos,
Computer Based Learning Unit, University of Leeds.
Copyright © 1997, 1998, 1999,
Ross Moore,
Mathematics Department, Macquarie University, Sydney.
The command line arguments were:
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The translation was initiated by Xiaofei Lu on 2005-09-21
Xiaofei Lu
2005-09-21