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Computational Linguistics and Information Processing

Revision as of 21:35, 25 July 2017 by Resnik (talk | contribs)

Computational Linguistics and Information Processing at Maryland

The CLIP Laboratory at Maryland is engaged in designing algorithms and methods that allow computers to effectively and efficiently perform human language-related tasks, as well as using computational methods to improve our scientific understanding of the human capacity for language. With faculty, researchers, and students spanning the Department of Computer Science, the Department of Linguistics, the iSchool, and the Robert H. Smith School of Business, we are a group known not only for high quality research but also intellectual diversity and the strength of our collaborations.


We are part of the broader language science initiative at Maryland, which integrates social and biological sciences with computer science and engineering. A number of language researchers in the CLIP lab are also affiliated with the Language and Media Processing (LAMP) Laboratory and the Neural and Cognitive Systems (NACS) program.

CLIP research covers major areas of computational research on language, including (but not limited to!) deep learning, human-in-the-loop machine learning, multilingual text processing and low-resource languages, machine translation, e-discovery, summarization, speech retrieval, cross-language information retrieval, ranking and personalization, computational social science NLP for mental health, data science for finance, data science for social good, and computational psycholinguistics.

The lab is a part of the University of Maryland Institute for Advanced Computer Studies (UMIACS), and it is located in AV Williams 3146.

For further information about the CLIP Laboratory, feel free to contact its current director, Prof. Philip Resnik.