A Research Associate (Post-Doctoral Researcher) position in Statistical Machine 
Translation is available at the University of Cambridge.      

The Research Associate will be funded by the EPSRC (UK) project `Improving 
Target Language Fluency in Statistical Machine Translation'.     The project is 
focused on developing robust, natural language generation systems that can be 
incorporated directly into syntax-based SMT.   

Duration: 12 months, renewable for another 12 months, starting Summer or Fall 
2015.      
Deadline:  The positions will remain open until filled.

http://www.jobs.ac.uk/job/ALB249/research-assistant-associate-in-statistical-machine-translation-fixed-term/
Reference: NM06012

Candidates should have a Ph.D. in machine learning,  natural language 
processing, speech recognition,  or a related area, with interests in any of 
the following topics :
- Statistical machine translation, syntactic SMT
- Neural networks, deep learning
- Natural language generation
- `Big Data' techniques large-scale text processing and for machine learning 
(e.g. Hadoop, Spark)

For candidates with an interest in supervision of graduate research,  there 
will be opportunities to set and lead research projects on the new Cambridge 
MPhil in Machine Learning, Speech, and Language Technologies which will begin 
in October 2015.     

Please send your CV to Bill Byrne ([email protected]) or to AdriĆ  de 
Gispert ([email protected]).     We are happy to answer any questions related to 
the position or the project.    We are also available to meet at upcoming 
conferences: HLT-NAACL, ACL, ...

SMT at Cambridge (http://divf.eng.cam.ac.uk/smt):  
Cambridge SMT researchers have developed the HiFST/HiPDT translation systems 
(http://ucam-smt.github.io),  leading to the 2012 EAMT Best Paper and EAMT 2010 
Best Thesis awards.  The team participates in international MT evaluations, 
such as the NIST and WMT shared tasks, with entries consistently ranked among 
the top submitted systems. Cambridge SMT researchers also have strong 
industrial connections, with PhD students and RAs going on to take positions at 
Google, IBM, SDL, Facebook, Nuance, and other top research labs in the UK and 
USA.

The SMT research team is part of the Cambridge Speech and Language Technologies 
Group which also carries out research in speech recognition,  speech synthesis, 
and statistical dialogue systems.   The SLT Group also has strong collaborative 
ties to the Natural Language Processing group at the Cambridge Computer 
Laboratory (http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/research/nl/) and to the Cambridge 
Computational and Biological Learning Group (http://cbl.eng.cam.ac.uk).    

For an overview of language research at the University of Cambridge, please see 
the Cambridge Language Sciences website (www.languagesciences.cam.ac.uk) .

--
Bill Byrne
Professor of Information Engineering 
University of Cambridge

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