The qualifications for this position are at least a B.A. in
Linguistics or a B.S. in Computational Linguistics and experience with
corpus annotation and analysis in support of computational linguistics
research and development. Another plus would be experience in
programming computers. Athough this position does not involve
programming, the linguist will have to work closely with computational
linguists and programmers in devising an appropriate annotation scheme
and authoring supporting knowledge, so familiarity with implementation
issues would be an asset. In addition, although the position does not
require prior expertise in physics, the linguist should not be
intimidated by the need to understand dialogues discussing elementary
physics principles and should be willing to learn about the physics
concepts involved.
The Why2000 group is a research group composed of artificial intelligence
researchers, computational linguists and psychologists. It is led by Kurt
VanLehn at the University of Pittsburgh (http://www.pitt.edu/~vanlehn)
and Art Graesser at the University of Memphis
(http://mnemosyne.csl.psyc.memphis.edu/home/graesser/). The research is
funded by a 3 year contract from the Office of Naval research that begins
May 1, 2000. The Why2000 group is part of CIRCLE, an NSF-funded research
center that studies human and computer tutoring (see
http://www.pitt.edu/~circle).
This position is located at the University of Pittsburgh in the
Learning Research and Development Center. It is a full-time research
staff position with full benefits. Salary will be commensurate with
experience. Send inquiries and CVs or resumes to Pamela Jordan
(pjo...@pitt.edu).
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