“You can write a paper” is kind of a running joke in the language engineering team when the discussion sways so far from the original topic that it is no longer helping to get the work done. But sometimes sidelines turn out to be interesting and fruitful. When I was presented an opportunity to do a PhD related to wikis, languages and translation I could not pass it. And because of the joke, I can claim full innocence – they told me to! ;)
The results are in and…. I got accepted! Screams with joy and then quickly shies away hoping nobody noticed.
What does this mean?
If you are a reader of this blog, the topics might get even more incomprehensible. Or the posts might be even more insightful and based on research instead of gut feelings. Hopefully, it doesn’t mean that I won’t have time to write more blog posts.
Practically, I will be starting at the beginning of January with the goal of writing a PhD dissertation and of graduating in about four years. The proposed topic for my dissertation is Supporting creation and interaction of open content with language technology, as part of the project “Finno-Ugric Digital Natives: Linguistic support for Finno-Ugric digital communities in generating online content”. As with my MA, I’ll do this at the University of Helsinki.
Initially I will be working three days a week on that and keep helping the language engineering team as well. We’ll see how it goes.
The first thing I will do is to participate in IWSDS (Workshop on Spoken Dialog Systems) held in January at Napa, California, USA. I will be presenting a paper about multilingual WikiTalk.
Congratulations
Great news! :-) Congrats