Difference between revisions of "Fall 2022 Schedule"

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| 2019.02.27 || Xiaolei
 
| 2019.02.27 || Xiaolei
 
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| 2019.03.06 || (advisory board meeting, maybe student presentations 03/08)
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| 2019.03.06 || CANCELLED for Friday CLASIC Advisory Board meeting & student presentations 03/08
 
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| 2019.03.13 || Kathy Mckeown (talk on 03/12)
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| 2019.03.13 || Kathy Mckeown (talk on 03/12) - CANCELLED BECAUSE OF WEATHER
 
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| 2019.03.20 || Jon (transformer/bert) (Fei Xia from UW at ICS colloquium on Friday, 03/22)
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| 2019.03.20 || Jon (transformer/bert) - CANCELLED  (Fei Xia from UW at ICS colloquium on Friday, 03/22)
 
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| style="background-color: DarkGray;" | 2019.03.27 || style="background-color: DarkGray;" | Spring break
 
| style="background-color: DarkGray;" | 2019.03.27 || style="background-color: DarkGray;" | Spring break
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| 2019.04.02 || 3:30 CS Colloq, DLC 170, Pat Verga, Neural Knowledge Representation and Reasoning - MUST SEE!
 
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| 2019.04.03 || Vivian
 
| 2019.04.03 || Vivian
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| 2019.04.17 || Shantanu
 
| 2019.04.17 || Shantanu
 
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| 2019.04.24 || Kevin (defense)
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| 2019.04.24 || Abhidip Bhattacharyya Prelim - Multimodal Vector Representations
 
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| 2019.05.01 ||  Skatje proposal
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| 2019.05.01 ||   
 
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| style="background-color: DarkGray;" | 2019.05.08 || style="background-color: DarkGray;" | Final exams
 
| style="background-color: DarkGray;" | 2019.05.08 || style="background-color: DarkGray;" | Final exams

Revision as of 14:39, 22 March 2019

2019.01.16
2019.01.23 Welcome Meeting, Plan Spring Schedule, Viv's practice talk
2019.01.30 Visiting Speaker: Ryan Cotterell, [1] (Alvin Grissom II is giving a talk on 1/29 3:30)

Title: The Past-Tense Debate on Steroids: Results from the CoNLL-SIGMORPHON Shared Task 2018

Abstract: In 2018, SIGMORPHON and CoNLL hosted a shared task on universal morphological inflection. The shared task featured over 100 distinct languages, whose morphology participants are asked to model. A word’s form reflects syntactic and semantic categories that are expressed by the word through a process termed morphology. For example, each English count noun has both singular and plural forms (robot/robots, process/processes). These are known as the inflected forms of the noun. Some languages display little inflection, while others possess a proliferation of forms. Polish verb can have nearly 100 inflected forms and an Archi verb has thousands (Kibrik 1998). Natural language processing systems must be able to analyze and generate these inflected forms. Fortunately, inflected forms tend to be systematically related to one another. This is why English speakers can usually predict the singular form from the plural and vice-versa, even for words they have never seen before: Given a novel noun wug, an English speaker knows that the plural is wugs. This talk focuses on the results of this shared task and how it relates to the past-tense debate of the 1980s, which focused on a similar task, but only on one lemma--inflection pairing: English lemma --> English past tense.

2019.02.06 Cancel, attend Yonatan Bisk's Feb 5 talk and teaching talk at noon 2/6 instead)
2019.02.13 [Cancel, attend Emma's teaching/research talk](prospective visiting days 02/14-02/15, Emma Strubell talk on 02/12)
2019.02.20 ACL paper clinic
2019.02.27 Xiaolei
2019.03.06 CANCELLED for Friday CLASIC Advisory Board meeting & student presentations 03/08
2019.03.13 Kathy Mckeown (talk on 03/12) - CANCELLED BECAUSE OF WEATHER
2019.03.20 Jon (transformer/bert) - CANCELLED (Fei Xia from UW at ICS colloquium on Friday, 03/22)
2019.03.27 Spring break
2019.04.02 3:30 CS Colloq, DLC 170, Pat Verga, Neural Knowledge Representation and Reasoning - MUST SEE!
2019.04.03 Vivian
2019.04.10 Rehan
2019.04.17 Shantanu
2019.04.24 Abhidip Bhattacharyya Prelim - Multimodal Vector Representations
2019.05.01
2019.05.08 Final exams


Past Schedules