I have made comments in your final papers and commited them to the subversion repository. I made the comments directly in the pdf (if you submitted in something other than pdf, I converted it to pdf, with the same basename). You should be able to view the comments in your favorite pdf viewer (adobe reader, skim, okular, apple’s preview, etc.)
I also added a file to each of your directories called course_grades.txt which lists all your grades for the course. It is a tab delimited file. For pretty viewing, you might want to open it with a spreadsheet program.
I also wanted to say thank you for an exciting course. As always, I end up learning quite a bit from teaching. I hope that you learned quite a bit as well, and that the topics we covered are useful to you in future endeavors.
Enjoy your well deserved break.
This is just a reminder that final papers are due next Wednesday, Dec. 16th by 5 p.m. The papers should be 5-15 pages long. Please commit them to the subversion repository, along with all code you wrote, and any additional resources I need to run your code, such as texts, databases, etc.
Here are today’s notes on advanced regular expressions in python and perl.
ling5200-grep2-notes.pdf
Here is the final presentation schedule for next week: Tuesday
- 12:40 Matt Cecil
- 12:55 Keith Mertz
- 13:10 Ashwini Vaidya
Thursday
- 12:40 Anwen Fredriksen
- 12:55 Steve Vihel
- 13:10 Calvin Pohawpotchoko
- 13:25 Sam Perdue
Please be sure to follow these guidelines:
- 5-10 minutes long
- Should prepare handouts or slides
- slides in pdf or ppt format please
- E-mail me slides by 10 a.m.
- You can use (preferably) my computer or yours
- Use your classmates as resources for ideas
- PRACTICE BEFOREHAND
Here are today’s notes on Bayesian and maximum entropy classifiers.
ling5200-nltk6-2-notes.pdf