A localized prediction model for statistical machine translation
- Christoph Tillmann
- Tong Zhang
- 2005
- ACL 2005
I am a Research Staff Member in the Neural Machine Translation (NMT) Group at the IBM T.J. Watson Research Center, and I have been working on algorithms for statistical or neural machine translation for more than 25 years.
During my time as a Ph.D. student and in the following years, my research focused on search algorithms for SMT (in particular dynamic-programming (DP) based algorithms) for word-based and phrase-based machine translation models. Here, I proposed a simple, sequential, block-based segmentation model for phrase-based SMT. That work has resulted in a first successful experiment with a linear model which relies entirely on binary feature functions. In addition, I have been working on beam search algorithms for extracting parallel sentence pairs from comparable data.
More recently, I have been working on the training and the evaluation of multi-lingual large language models as well as on HAP (hate/abuse/profanity) filtering to remove harmful content from text.
Personal
Native speaker of German. Excellent reading proficiency in Russian, English, and French. Excellent speaking proficiency in English and Russian. Close to native speaker proficiency in Russian (some days).
In 1986, I won a third place in a nationwide Russian language studies competition for high-school students, Stuttgart, Germany.
In 1991-1992, I have been an exchange student at Leningradskii Gosudarstvennyi Universitet (LGU) , St.Petersburg, Russian Federation with a grant of the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) .
During my studies in Computer Science from 1991 to 1995, I received a grant from the Cusanuswerk .
I like reading, in particular French-language and Russian-language works of fiction (mostly). I also love to read non-fiction about (military) history, philosophy and people's biographies. Occasionally I do photography and more recently, I have been playing (too much) chess online.