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What sparked your interest in speech and language processing?
How do you think speech and language processing is changing the society for the new generation?
I think more and more corporations are realizing that expertise in this area is critical to the success of their businesses – in data mining, building dialogue systems, machine translation, every area we work in. This means more students want to take our courses and more of them will get jobs doing speech and NLP. This is really great for our field, since now people think what we work on is really important from a business as well as a research perspective.
What is your holy grail in speech and language processing? When will we achieve it?
Do you have any specific advice for students, junior faculty or others early in their careers?
Which of your publications is your favorite? Why?
After thinking about this a while, I think it’s some work Jacques Terken (then of IPO but visiting Bell Labs at the time) and I did, published in Language and Speech in 1994: Deaccentuation of words representing ‘given’information: Effects of persistence of grammatical function and surface position. It’s unusual in my experience to get really clear-cut results in an open-ended study like this one, where we had some ideas of what factors might influence how speakers produced “given” items but the results were surprisingly interesting and quite informative. It was also great fun working with Jacques because we came from different schools of modeling intonation and had very different views of how to talk about the results we got, but we had so much fun planning and running the experiments and agreeing on ways of assessing accentuation that it worked out extremely well. So this is one of my papers I think deserves more attention.
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