I graduated at 2011 and continue researching computational linguistics at NTU.
My thesis, co-advised by Michael Tanangkingsing and Shu-Kai Hsieh, performed some experiments on domain WSD (Word Sense Disambiguation) based on Chinese Wordnet, a machine-readable lexical database that groups words into cognitive synonyms.
WSD is an AI-complete problem that intrigues me. Researchers working with WSD assign senses to polysemous words (words with more than one meaning) in particular sentences, using some sense inventory like WordNet. I chose WSD as my thesis topic following my RA work at Academia Sinica. The work is based on the SemEval-2010 shared task of domain adaptation of WSD systems. I experimented with some domain keyword lists to improve the accuracy rate of correctly assigning senses to words in environmental texts.
I felt happy at taking courses I wanted. In this program I could choose to learn whatever I liked to help me reach my goal. Not only did I learn critical thinking in the English courses and take specialized linguistic courses, I also took three courses outside of the English department. I learned my appetite for science and critical thinking from the course Rhetoric of Science, I took statistics from the Electronic Department and Graduate Institute of Vocational Education, and I also took C language and Linux from the Computer Science Department.