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Degree Regulations & Programmes of Study 2010/2011
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DRPS : Course Catalogue : School of Informatics : Informatics

Postgraduate Course: Natural Language Understanding (Level 11) (INFR11061)

Course Outline
School School of Informatics College College of Science and Engineering
Course type Standard Availability Available to all students
Credit level (Normal year taken) SCQF Level 11 (Postgraduate) Credits 10
Home subject area Informatics Other subject area None
Course website http://www.inf.ed.ac.uk/teaching/courses/nlu
Course description This course explores current research into interpreting natural language. Motivations for this study range from foundational attempts to understand how people interpret communication to entirely practical efforts to engineer systems for performing a variety of language tasks, such as information extraction, question answering, natural language front ends to databases, human-robot interaction and customer relationship management, to name a few.

This course represents an introduction to the theory and practice of computational approaches to natural language understanding. The course will cover common parsing methods for sentences, discourse and dialogue, and it will also address lexical processing tasks such as word sense disambiguation and clustering. We will study state of the art symbolic techniques in deep and shallow language processing, as well as statistical models, acquired by both unsupervised and supervised machine learning from online linguistic resources. Students will have the opportunity to explore what they have learned in written and practical assignments. These assignments will be designed to enable students to gain an understanding for the pervasiveness of language ambiguity at all levels and the problems this poses for automated language understanding, and for the relative strengths and weaknesses of the various theories and engineering approaches to these problems.
Entry Requirements
Pre-requisites Students MUST have passed: Advanced Natural Language Processing (INFR11059) AND Introductory Applied Machine Learning (INFR09029)
Co-requisites
Prohibited Combinations Students MUST NOT also be taking Natural Language Understanding (Level 10) (INFR10035)
Other requirements For Informatics PG and final year MInf students only, or by special permission of the School.
Additional Costs None
Information for Visiting Students
Pre-requisites None
Prospectus website http://www.ed.ac.uk/studying/visiting-exchange/courses
Course Delivery Information
Summary of Intended Learning Outcomes
1 - Given a parsing problem students should be able to use state-of-the-art symbolic parsing techniques, including lexicalised parsing to solve the problem and provide a written explanation of the parsing techniques used in the course.
2 - Given a labelled corpus, students should be able to select and use state-of-the-art statistical parsing techniques (generative and discriminative) by training parsers on the labelled corpus using existing software packages.
3 - Given an NLU system, students should be able to choose appropriate evaluation metrics for the system, and use error analysis to propose improvements to the language processing models.
4 - Given an example of a problem in coreference resolution, discourse segmentation, and discourse parsing, students should be able to provide a written description of how current symbolic and statistical techniques help solve the problem.
5 - Given a description of an NLU system, the student should be able to relate it to features of human models of language interpretation at various levels of processing (words, sentences, discourse and dialogue).
6 - Given a model and a labelled corpus, students should be able to employ existing ML software packages to train the model on the corpus in order to perform a lexical semantic task.
7 - Given an open-ended problem of choosing informative features for a particular NLP task and a description of the available training resources, the student should be able to give a well-justified, written and/or practical, selection of such informative features.
Assessment Information
Written Examination 70
Assessed Assignments 30
Oral Presentations 0

Assessment
Practical exercises, addressing semantic tasks such as word sense disambiguation and discriminative parsing. Written part to include open-ended question.

If delivered in semester 1, this course will have an option for semester 1 only visiting undergraduate students, providing assessment prior to the end of the calendar year.
Please see Visiting Student Prospectus website for Visiting Student Assessment information
Special Arrangements
Not entered
Contacts
Course organiser Dr Michael Rovatsos
Tel: (0131 6)51 3263
Email: mrovatso@inf.ed.ac.uk
Course secretary Miss Gillian Watt
Tel: (0131 6)50 5194
Email: gwatt@inf.ed.ac.uk
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copyright 2010 The University of Edinburgh - 1 September 2010 6:11 am