Turkish and its challenges for language and speech processing (Kemal Oflazer, Murat Saraçlar).- Morphological processing for Turkish (Kemal Oflazer).- Morphological disambiguation for Turkish (Dilek Zeynep Hakkani-Tür, Murat Saraçlar, Gökhan Tür, Kemal Oflazer, Deniz Yuret).- Language modeling for Turkish text and speech processing (Ebru Arısoy, Murat Saraçlar).- Turkish speech recognition (Ebru Arısoy, Murat Saraçlar).- Turkish named entity recognition (Reyyan Yeniterzi, Gökhan Tür, Kemal Oflazer).- Dependency parsing of Turkish (Gülşen Eryiğit, Joakim Nivre, Kemal Oflazer).- Wide-covering parsing, semantics and morphology (Ruket Çakıcı, Mark Steedman, Cem Bozşahin).- Deep parsing of Turkish with lexical-functional grammar (Özlem Çetinoğlu, Kemal Oflazer).- Statistical Machine Translation and Turkish (Kemal Oflazer, Reyyan Yeniterzi, Ǐlknur Durgar-El Kahlout).- Machine Translation between Turkic languages (A. Cüneyd Tantuğ, Eşref Adalı).- Sentiment analysis in Turkish (Gizem Gezici, Berrin Yanıkoğlu).- The Turkish treebank (Gülşen Eryiğit, Kemal Oflazer, Umut Sulubacak).- Linguistic corpora: A view from Turkish (Mustafa Aksan, Yeşim Aksan).- Turkish wordnet (Özlem Çetinoğlu, Orhan Bilgin, Kemal Oflazer).- Turkish discourse bank: Connectives and their configurations (Deniz Zeyrek, Işın Demirşahin, Cem Bozşahin).-
Kemal Oflazer received his Ph.D. in computer science from
Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, USA, and his M.Sc. in
computer science and B.Sc. in electrical and electronics
engineering from Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey.
He is currently a faculty member at Carnegie Mellon University in
Doha, Qatar, where he is also the Associate Dean for Research. He
has held visiting positions at the Computing Research Laboratory at
New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, USA and at the Language
Technologies Institute, Carnegie Mellon University. Prior to
joining CMU-Qatar, he worked at Sabancı University in Istanbul,
Turkey (2000-2008) and Bilkent University in Ankara, Turkey
(1989-2000). He has worked extensively on developing natural
language processing techniques and resources for Turkish. Oflazer’s
current research interests include statistical machine translation
into morphologically complex languages, the use of NLP for language
learning and machine learning for computational morphology. In
addition, he was a member of the editorial boards of Computational
Linguistics, the Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research,
Machine Translation, and Research on Language and Computation and
was a book review editor for Natural Language Engineering. He was a
member of the nomination and advisory boards for EACL, and served
as the program co-chair for ACL 2005, an area chair for COLING
2000, EACL 2003, ACL 2004, ACL 2012, and EMNLP 2013 and the
organization committee co-chair for EMNLP 2014. Currently, he is an
editorial board member of both Language Resources and Evaluation
and Natural Language Engineering journals and is a member of the
advisory board for “SpringerBriefs in Natural Language
Processing”.
Murat Saraçlar received his B.Sc. degree in 1994 from the
Electrical and Electronics Engineering Department at Bilkent
University, Ankara, Turkey, his M.S.E. degree in 1997 and Ph.D.
degree in 2001 from the Electrical and Computer Engineering
Department at the Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, USA. From
2000 to 2005, he was with the multimedia services department at
AT&T Labs Research, and in 2005 joined the Electrical and
Electronic Engineering Department of Boğaziçi University, Istanbul,
Turkey, where he is currently a full professor. He was a visiting
research scientist at Google Inc., New York, USA (2011-2012) and an
academic visitor at IBM T.J. Watson Research Center (2012-2013).
Saraçlar was awarded the AT&T Labs Research Excellence Award in
2002, the Turkish Academy of Sciences Young Scientist (TUBA-GEBIP)
Award in 2009, and the IBM Faculty Award in 2010. He has published
more than 100 articles in journals and conference proceedings.
Furthermore, he served as an associate editor for IEEE Signal
Processing Letters (2009-2012) and IEEE Transactions on Audio,
Speech, and Language Processing (2012-2016). He was an editorial
board member of Language Resources and Evaluation from 2012to 2016,
and is currently an editorial board member of Computer Speech and
Language as well as a member of the IEEE Signal Processing Society
Speech and Language Technical Committee (2007-2009, 2015-2018).
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |