Juan Luis Gastaldi: Catalogue data in Spring Semester 2023

Name Dr. Juan Luis Gastaldi
Address
Professur für Informatik
ETH Zürich, OAT W 17
Andreasstrasse 5
8092 Zürich
SWITZERLAND
E-mailjuan.luis.gastaldi@inf.ethz.ch
URLhttp://www.sphere.univ-paris-diderot.fr/spip.php?article1809&lang=en
DepartmentHumanities, Social and Political Sciences
RelationshipLecturer

NumberTitleECTSHoursLecturers
263-5353-10LPhilosophy of Language and Computation II (with Case Study) Information 5 credits2V + 1U + 1AR. Cotterell, J. L. Gastaldi
AbstractUnderstand the philosophical underpinnings of language-based artificial intelligence.
Learning objectiveThis graduate class, taught like a seminar, is designed to help you understand the philosophical underpinnings of modern work in natural language processing (NLP), most of which is centered around statistical machine learning applied to natural language data.
ContentThis graduate class, taught like a seminar, is designed to help you understand the philosophical underpinnings of modern work in natural language processing (NLP), most of which is centered around statistical machine learning applied to natural language data. The course is a year-long journey, but the second half (Spring 2023) does not depend on the first (Fall 2022) and thus either half may be taken independently. In each semester, we divide the class time into three modules. Each module is centered around a philosophical topic. After discussing logical, structuralist, and generative approaches to language in the first semester, in the second semester we will focus on information, language games, and pragmatics. The modules will be four weeks long. During the first two weeks of a module, we will read and discuss original texts and supplementary criticism. During the second two weeks, we will read recent NLP papers and discuss how the authors of those works are building on philosophical insights into our conception of language—perhaps implicitly or unwittingly.
LiteratureThe literature will be provided by the instructors on the class website
263-5353-20LPhilosophy of Language and Computation II Information 3 credits2V + 1UR. Cotterell, J. L. Gastaldi
AbstractUnderstand the philosophical underpinnings of language-based artificial intelligence.
Learning objectiveThis graduate class, taught like a seminar, is designed to help you understand the philosophical underpinnings of modern work in natural language processing (NLP), most of which is centered around statistical machine learning applied to natural language data.
ContentThis graduate class, taught like a seminar, is designed to help you understand the philosophical underpinnings of modern work in natural language processing (NLP), most of which is centered around statistical machine learning applied to natural language data. The course is a year-long journey, but the second half (Spring 2023) does not depend on the first (Fall 2022) and thus either half may be taken independently. In each semester, we divide the class time into three modules. Each module is centered around a philosophical topic. After discussing logical, structuralist, and generative approaches to language in the first semester, in the second semester we will focus on information, language games, and pragmatics. The modules will be four weeks long. During the first two weeks of a module, we will read and discuss original texts and supplementary criticism. During the second two weeks, we will read recent NLP papers and discuss how the authors of those works are building on philosophical insights into our conception of language—perhaps implicitly or unwittingly.
LiteratureThe literature will be provided by the instructors on the class website