Chris Dyer (original) (raw)
Prospective Students
I am not currently taking new students.
Research
My research interests lie at or near the intersection of machine learning, natural language processing, and linguistics. A unifying theme of much of my work is multilinguality. Some current topics of interest are:
- Machine translation
- Neural network models for language processing
- Computational morphology and phonology
- NLP on noisy text (Twitter, Sina Weibo, etc.)
- Language modeling
- Feature induction and representation learning
- Unsupervised and semi-supervised learning
- Bayesian techniques
- Big data algorithms
- Probabilistic music models I'm currently supported by grants from:
- The National Science Foundation (Lexical Borrowing)
- DARPA (LORELEI)
- Google (A Hybrid Neural–Phrase-Based Model for Machine Translation)
- The Army Research Office (MT/NLP for Low-Resource Languages) For more information about my research, see my CV or publications list or Google Scholar page.
Teaching
- Fall 2015 - 11-763 Structured Prediction
- Fall 2015 - 11-711 Algorithms for NLP (with Miguel Ballesteros and Bob Frederking)
- Spring 2015 - 11-731 Machine Translation (with Alon Lavie)
- Spring 2015 - 11-411/611 Natural Language Processing (with Alan W Black and Shomir Wilson).
- Fall 2014 - 11-711 Algorithms for NLP (with Alon Lavie and Bob Frederking)
- Spring 2014 - 11-731 Machine Translation (with Alon Lavie)
- Spring 2014 - Undergraduate Natural Language Processing
- Spring 2014 - Advanced MT Seminar
- Fall 2013 - 10-710/11-763 Structured Prediction for Language and Other Discrete Data (with Noah Smith)
- Fall 2013 - 11-732 Self-Paced Lab: MT
- Spring 2013 - 11-731 Machine Translation (with Alon Lavie)
- Fall 2012 - 11-732 Self-Paced Lab: MT
- Spring 2011 - 11-411 Natural Language Processing (with Alan W. Black)
Random Stuff
I am originally from Texas, and I have lived in North Carolina, Berlin, Germany, and Washington (DC and state). I play the cello.