6.67 FYI: Computational Ling, Ph.D. program, Fellowships

The Linguist List linguist at tam2000.tamu.edu
Wed Jan 18 05:45:05 UTC 1995


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LINGUIST List:  . Tue 17 Jan 1995. ISSN: 1068-4875. Lines: 181
 
Subject: 6.67 FYI: Computational Ling, Ph.D. program, Fellowships
 
Moderators: Anthony Rodrigues Aristar: Texas A&M U. <aristar at tam2000.tamu.edu>
            Helen Dry: Eastern Michigan U. <hdry at emunix.emich.edu>
 
Asst. Editors: Ron Reck <rreck at emunix.emich.edu>
               Ann Dizdar <dizdar at tam2000.tamu.edu>
               Ljuba Veselinova <lveselin at emunix.emich.edu>
               Liz Bodenmiller <eboden at emunix.emich.edu>
 
-------------------------Directory-------------------------------------
 
1)
Date: Sun, 15 Jan 1995 16:24:02 -0500 (EST)
From: Cathy Ball (CBALL at guvax.acc.georgetown.edu)
Subject: Graduate Studies in Computational Linguistics at Georgetown
 
2)
Date: Mon, 16 Jan 95 14:19:13 CST
From: kemmer at ruf.rice.edu (Suzanne E Kemmer)
Subject: Ph.D. program; fellowships available
 
-------------------------Messages--------------------------------------
1)
Date: Sun, 15 Jan 1995 16:24:02 -0500 (EST)
From: Cathy Ball (CBALL at guvax.acc.georgetown.edu)
Subject: Graduate Studies in Computational Linguistics at Georgetown
 
Graduate studies in Computational Linguistics at Georgetown University
 
The Department of Linguistics at Georgetown University offers four
concentrations leading to a MS and PhD in Linguistics: Theoretical
Linguistics,Sociolinguistics, Applied Linguistics and *Computational
Linguistics*. Applications are invited for Fall 1995 (application deadline:
February 1).
 
We offer a variety of courses in machine translation, neural networks,
computer-assisted language learning, and natural language processing.
Beginning in 1995-1996, we will also offer a focus on INTELLIGENT INFORMATION
RETRIEVAL, and applicants with an interest in this area are especially
encouraged to apply,as are women, minorities, and students with disabilities.
We anticipate having two or more fellowships open in the Fall for qualified
PhD students (stipend + tuition).
 
If you would like more information on the program, please write to the
address below, and visit our World Wide Web pages at:
 
        http://www.georgetown.edu/cball/gu_lx.html
 
        Catherine N. Ball
        Department of Linguistics
        Georgetown University
        Washington DC 20057
        cball at guvax.georgetown.edu
 
Computational Faculty:
* Catherine Ball (Program Head; natural language processing, corpus
        linguistics)
* Catherine Doughty (language acquisition, CALL)
* Donald Loritz (instructional parsing, adaptive resonance theory)
* Bruce Lund (Adjunct, NIST; Prolog, machine translation)
* Susann Luperfoy (Adjunct, MITRE Corp.; machine translation,
        discourse processing)
* Solomon Sara, SJ (phonology, Prolog)
* Paul Portner (formal semantics, knowledge representation)
* Mahe Vellauthapillai (Computer Science; AI, C/C++)
* Lisa Zsiga (phonetics, phonology, acoustic phonetics, speech
        synthesis)
 
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2)
Date: Mon, 16 Jan 95 14:19:13 CST
From: kemmer at ruf.rice.edu (Suzanne E Kemmer)
Subject: Ph.D. program; fellowships available
 
 
A re-post of posting of Dec 25, which seems not to have appeared.
 
 
                     Ph.D. PROGRAM IN LINGUISTICS
                          AT RICE UNIVERSITY
 
The Department of Linguistics at Rice University announces its Ph.D.
program in Linguistics (est. 1982), and the opening of competition for
its graduate fellowships for 1995-96. We anticipate that 5 fellowships
for new students will most likely be available.
 
The doctoral program at Rice emphasizes the study of language use, the
relation of language and mind, and functional/cognitive approaches to
linguistic theory. A strong component of the program is field studies
in particular language areas, as indicated by its year-long field
methods requirement. Intensive research activity in cognitive/functional
linguistics, corpus linguistics, language change, computational
modelling, discourse studies, and American Indian, Austronesian and other
languages is ongoing in the department.
 
Interdisciplinary opportunities are available with the Ph.D. programs
in Cognitive Psychology, Philosophy, Anthropology, the interdisciplinary
group in Cognitive Sciences, and the Center for Cultural Studies.
 
The department hosts a distinguished speakers series as well as a
biennial Symposium on Language (topic for 1995: Usage-Based Models of
Language).
 
FACULTY AND RESEARCH INTERESTS
 
Michael Barlow, Ph.D. Linguistics, Stanford University. Grammatical
   theory, corpus linguistics, second language acquisition, discourse.
 
Lilly Chen, Ph.D. Linguistics, University of Illinois. Chinese
   linguistics, grammaticalization, metaphor, Chinese classic novel.
 
James Copeland, Chair, Ph.D. Linguistics, Cornell University.
   Functional linguistics, phonology, Germanic linguistics,
   grammaticalization, American Indian linguistics (Tarahumara).
 
Philip W. Davis, Ph.D. Linguistics, Cornell University. Semantics and
   syntax, language and intelligence, Amerindian (Bella Coola; Alabama),
   Austronesian (Atayal, Ilokano, Yogad).
 
Spike Gildea, Ph.D. Linguistics, University of Oregon. Diachronic
   syntax, field methods and ethics, phonology, typological/functional
   linguistics, Amazonian languages.
 
Roy G. Jones, Ph.D. Slavic Linguistics, University of Texas at Austin.
   Amerindian (Koasati/Coushatta), Russian folk epic and Slavic linguistics.
 
Suzanne Kemmer, Ph.D. Linguistics, Stanford University. Typology and
   universals, semantics, syntactic and semantic change, cognitive
   linguistics, Germanic, Austronesian.
 
Sydney Lamb, Ph.D. Linguistics, University of California, Berkeley.
   Cognitive linguistics, neural network modelling, Amerindian (Monachi).
 
E. Douglas Mitchell, Ph.D. Linguistics, University of Texas at Austin.
   Comparative Indo-European linguistics, historical linguistics, early
   Germanic dialects, Sanskrit.
 
Livia Polanyi, Ph.D. English, University of Michigan. Discourse analysis,
   language and society.
 
Stephen A. Tyler, Ph.D. Anthropology, Stanford University. Cognitive
   studies, philosophy of language, anthropological linguistics,
   languages of India.
 
FINANCIAL AID
Graduate fellowships include tuition, and for especially
well-qualified students, a cash stipend. Graduate stipends are
normally renewable for four years upon satisfactory performance, and
candidates can apply for a fifth year of support. (The department is
fortunate to have been able so far to support all students it has
admitted, through University Fellowships and Presidential
Fellowships.)
 
RICE UNIVERSITY
Rice is a small private university dedicated to the promotion of arts
and letters, science, and engineering.  It was founded in 1912 by
William Marsh Rice. Throughout its history, the institution has
enjoyed a reputation for excellence and selectivity in a spacious,
tree-lined campus setting featuring a distinctive blend of
Mediterranean and Renaissance architecture, noted for its red tile
roofs, courtyards, and arches. Current enrollment is ca. 2700
undergraduates and 1,200 graduate students; faculty:student ratio is
1:10.
 
APPLICATION DEADLINE: February 1, 1995.
 
For more information about the program, please contact:
 
Department of Linguistics
Rice University
P.O. Box 1892
Houston TX 77251-1892
 
(713) 527-6010
email: ling at ricevm1.rice.edu
 
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