We have an AI faculty candidate talk tomorrow at 10am. Looks very interesting.
Please attend if you can so we can have a good audience for her.
Thanks,
-Alan
-----Original Appointment-----
From: Amador, Janet <janet.amador@oregonstate.edu>
Sent: Monday, March 14, 2022 4:30 PM
To: Amador, Janet; eecs-faculty@engr.orst.edu; eecs-grads@engr.oregonstate.edu; Maria Leonor Pacheco Gonzales
Subject: Maria Pacheco presentation
When: Wednesday, March 16, 2022 10:00 AM-11:00 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada).
Where:
Zoom link for presentation
https://oregonstate.zoom.us/j/94158405375?pwd=eXVXU0F6Uys2a3JvcjRQaWFkeUp4dz09
Title: Neural-Symbolic Modeling for Natural Language Discourse
Abstract:
Language “in the wild” is complex and ambiguous and relies on a shared understanding of the world for its interpretation. Most current NLP methods represent language by learning
word co-occurrence patterns from massive amounts of linguistic data. This representation can be very powerful, but it is insufficient to capture the meaning behind written and spoken communication. In this talk, I will motivate neural-symbolic representations
for dealing with these challenges. On the one hand, symbols have inherent explanatory power, and they can help us express domain knowledge and enforce consistency across different decisions. On the other hand, expressive distributed representations allow us
to leverage the strengths of statistical language models to make sense of large amounts of linguistic data.
In this talk, I will introduce a holistic framework that covers all stages of the neural-symbolic pipeline: modeling, learning, inference, and its application for analyzing discourse
in real-world scenarios and show its advantages with respect to end-to-end neural approaches and traditional statistical relational learning methods.
Bio: Maria Pacheco is a PhD Candidate in the Department of Computer Science at Purdue University. Her research focuses broadly on neural-symbolic methods to model natural language
discourse scenarios, such as analyzing conversations, argumentation, and narratives. Before joining Purdue, she spent a couple of years working as a data scientist and software engineer for various startups in her hometown of Caracas, Venezuela. She has published
in top Natural Language Processing conferences and journals and has delivered tutorials on neural-symbolic modeling for NLP to diverse audiences, including an IJCAI ‘21 tutorial and an upcoming COLING ‘22 tutorial. Maria is a recipient of the 2021 Microsoft
Research Dissertation Grant, and one of the main organizers of the LatinX in AI events in NLP.