blog
-
Presentation at Digital Classicist Berlin
Cross-posted from the CLTK blog Three of us – Kyle Johnson, Clément Besnier, and Todd Cook – presented to the Digital Classicist Berlin program at the Berlin–Brandenburgischen Akademie der Wissenschaften....
-
CLTK v. 1.0 and ACL Publication
Cross-posted from the CLTK blog Last month, the annual ACL conference published the CLTK’s de facto “white paper” (“The Classical Language Toolkit: An NLP Framework for Pre-Modern Languages”). Some time...
-
Announcing 'alpha' release of CLTK v. 1.0
Cross-posted from CLTK blog The core maintainers are pleased to announce the first pre-release of the CLTK’s version 1.0. More information will follow, but at the highest level the guiding...
-
On under-resourced languages and the CLTK
The following entry is cross-posted from the CLTK blog. The CLTK has as a central goal to provide complete NLP coverage of all pre-modern languages. In practice, this ambitious goal...
-
My "Affable Guide to Leaving Classics"
Off and on, over the past year, I have been slowly working on this essay, “An Affable Guide to Leaving Classics”, which records my thoughts about how to move out...
-
Two recent NLP talks at Harvard
I’ve been remiss in posting here my lectures on the CLTK and related research over the past year. Since some of these repeat content, perhaps I should only post them...
-
CLTK accepted to Google Summer of Code
A few weeks back the Classical Language Toolkit was accepted to Google Summer of Code. Needless to say this is terrific news for the project! Here’s the organization’s official announcement....
-
NLP lecture to NYC Ascent post-docs
Yesterday I had the pleasure to lecture, along with my colleagues Cesar Koirala and Ken Bame, about natural language processing and machine learning. We focused on three areas, with particular...
-
Two recent CLTK lectures
I have given two lectures on the CLTK over the past few months and should post them before too much time as gone by. The first lecture was last November,...
-
10,000 most frequent lemmata in Greek and Latin canons
This is a followup to a previous post, which got more attention than I anticipated, of 10,000 most frequent words in Greek and Latin canon. The difference with these latest...