Ruslan Mitkov
Ruslan Mitkov | |
---|---|
Alma mater | Humboldt University Technical University of Dresden |
Known for | Contributions to Anaphora Resolution, and automatic generation of multiple choice questions |
Scientific career | |
Institutions | Lancaster University Institute of Mathematics and Informatics (Bulgarian Academy of Sciences) Saarland University University of Hamburg |
Thesis | Beiträge zum computergestützten Wissenstesten (1987) |
Doctoral advisor | Nikolaus Joachim Lehmann |
Ruslan Mitkov is a professor at Lancaster University, and a researcher in Natural Language Processing and Computational Linguistics. He completed his PhD at Technical University of Dresden under the supervision of Nikolaus Joachim Lehmann. He has published more than 240 refereed papers and is best known for his contributions to Anaphora Resolution,[1][2][3] and his seminal work in computer-aided generation of multiple-choice tests[4][5] among others.
Mitkov is the sole editor of the Oxford Handbook of Computational Linguistics (Oxford University Press)[6] and the author of the book Anaphora Resolution (published by Longman), which have become standard textbooks in their fields.[7][8][9] He is also the co-founder and editor-in-chief of the Cambridge journal Natural Language Engineering[10] and the editor-in-chief of John Benjamins’ book series in Natural Language Processing.[11]
Selected works
[edit]- 1998. Robust pronoun resolution with limited knowledge,[12] Proceedings of the 36th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics and 17th International Conference on Computational Linguistics-Volume 2
- 2001. Introduction to the special issue on computational anaphora resolution. Mitkov, Ruslan, Branimir Boguraev, and Shalom Lappin. Computational Linguistics 27.4 (2001): 473-477.
- 2003 Computer-aided generation of multiple-choice tests,[4] Proceedings of the HLT-NAACL 03 workshop on Building educational applications using natural language processing-Volume 2
Honors and awards
[edit]- 1993, 1994. Fellow of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
- 2002. Keynote speaker at CICLing conference[13]
- 2011. Doctor Honoris Causa from Plovdiv University
- 2012. Keynote speaker at TSD conference[14]
- 2014. Professor Honoris Causa from Veliko Tarnovo University
References
[edit]- ^ Su, Keh-Yih (2007), Ruslan Mitkov, Anaphora Resolution, Texts in Statistical Science, Springer
- ^ Jurafsky, Daniel; Martin, James H. (2014), "Chapter 21: Psycholinguistic Studies of Reference and Coherence", Speech and language processing (2 ed.), London: Pearson, p. 41
- ^ Jackson, Peter (2004), Book Review: The Oxford Handbook of Computational Linguistics, Computational Linguistics, pp. 103–106
- ^ a b "Computer-Aided Generation of Multiple-Choice Tests" (PDF). 2003-04-08. Retrieved 2018-07-31.
- ^ "Semantic similarity of distractors in multiple-choice tests:extrinsic evaluation]" (PDF).
- ^ Mitkov, Ruslan, ed. (2012). "Oxford Handbook of Computational Linguistics". Oxford Handbooks. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199276349.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-927634-9. Retrieved 2018-08-01.
- ^ Bird, Steven; Klein, Ewan; Loper, Edward (2009), "Chapter 1: Language Processing and Python", Natural language processing with Python: analyzing text with the natural language toolkit (2 ed.), O'Reilly Media, Inc., p. 34
- ^ Sayed, Imran Q., "Issues in Anaphora Resolution", Stanford
- ^ Poesio, Massimo; Ponzetto, Simone; Versley, Yannick (2011), Computational models of anaphora resolution: A survey
- ^ "Natural Language Engineering | Cambridge Core". cambridge.org. Retrieved 2018-08-01.
- ^ "benjamins.com/catalog/nlp". benjamins.com. Retrieved 2018-07-31.
- ^ Ruslan Mitkov (2002-09-30). "Robust pronoun resolution with limited knowledge" (PDF). Retrieved 2018-07-31.
- ^ "CICLing 2002 Conference". cicling.org. Retrieved 2018-10-17.
- ^ "TSD 2012 Keynote Speakers". tsdconference.org. Retrieved 2018-08-01.