Deprecated: The each() function is deprecated. This message will be suppressed on further calls in /home/zhenxiangba/zhenxiangba.com/public_html/phproxy-improved-master/index.php on line 456 Liang Huang's homepage
God has a Book where he maintains the best proofs of all mathematical theorems,
proofs that are elegant and perfect... You don't have to believe in God, but
you should believe in the Book.
Liang Huang (2008).
Forest Reranking: Discriminative Parsing with Non-Local Features.
To appear in Proceedings of ACL 2008,
Columbus, OH.
Received Outstanding Paper Award.
[pdf]
[slides] [bib]
Software: the modified Charniak parser that outputs packed forests (to be released).
Haitao Mi, Liang Huang, and Qun Liu (2008).
Forest-based Translation.
To appear in Proceedings of ACL 2008,
Columbus, OH.
[pdf] [slides] [bib]
Wenbin Jiang, Liang Huang and Qun Liu and Yajuan Lü (2008).
A Cascaded Linear Model for Joint Chinese Word Segmentation and Part-of-Speech Tagging.
To appear in Proceedings of ACL 2008,
Columbus, OH.
[pdf] [slides] [bib]
[Under Review]
Liang Huang, Hao Zhang, Daniel Gildea, and Kevin Knight (2008).
Binarization of Synchronous Context-Free Grammars.
Submitted to Computational Linguistics.
Technical Report version: [pdf]
Journal version of the 2006 conference paper, including many new
results, especially the first real-data examples of non-binarizable
syntactic reorderings between English and Chinese, and a new section on
efficient handling of those non-binarizable rules.
Liang Huang and David
Chiang (2007).
Forest Rescoring: Faster Decoding with Integrated Language Models.
In Proceedings of ACL
2007, Prague, Czech Rep.
Nominated for the Best Paper Award.
[paper] [slides]
[bib]
Software: Cubit
Note: This version corrects the behavior of the published version in some boundary conditions regarding Algorithm 3. Thanks to David A. Smith and Jonathan May for pointing it out. The actual implementations, however, use an earlier version which has the correct behavior (but less efficient).
The published version is archived here.
Adam Lucas, Liang Huang, Aravind Joshi, and Ken Dill (2007).
Statistical Mechanics of Helix Bundles using a Dynamic Programming
Approach.
In J. Am. Chem. Soc., 129 (14), pp. 4272-4281.
JACS online version.
Ken Dill, Adam Lucas, Julia Hockenmaier, Liang Huang, David
Chiang, and Aravind Joshi (2007).
Computational Linguistics: a new tool for exploring biopolymer
structures and statistical mechanics.
In Polymer 48 (15), pp. 4289-4300, Elsevier.
Programming Languages
Stephanie Weirich and Liang Huang (2004).
A Design for Type-Directed Programming in Java.
In Proceedings of the Workshop on Object-Oriented Developments, ENTCS.
[ps][pdf]
The extended version is University of Pennsylvania Computer & Information Science Technical Report MS-CIS-04-11.
[ps][pdf].
Playing Go often prevents me from doing research...
I am color-blind. Here are some resources I collected on color-blindness.
I am very interested in the mathematical theory characterizing the color space of color-blind people.
Recently some experiments convinced me (and my non-color-blind friends) that
my color space is two-dimensional rather than 3D, basically collapsing the red-green plane into a diagonal line
(which means the transformation is irrevertible).
The projected colors are usually "brownish-yellow" in the eyes of non-color-blind people.
My blue vision is not affected though, and that's why it is always my favorite color.
However, I don't like what they call "bleu".
I proudly speak Wu Chinese as my mother tongue, though Mandarin is also native to me.
In terms of the number of speakers, Wu (Sino-Tibetan : Sinitic : Southern) is the second largest language in China and the 10th largest in the world.
It is a soft and light language spoken mainly in
the Jiang-Nan region, i.e.,
Shanghai, Zhejiang and southern part of Jiangsu.
It is very different from Mandarin in many aspects (details here).
Here are some further resources on Chinese Linguistic Groups and the Sinitic Group.
I will be involved in the Romanization of Wu and/or Shanghainese.
If people do not believe that mathematics is simple, it is only because they do not realize how complicated life is.
-- John von Neumann
God has a Book where he maintains the best proofs of all mathematical theorems, proofs that are elegant and perfect... You don't have to believe in God, but you should believe in the Book.
-- Paul Erdös
Note: both are non-practising Jews from Budapest in the early 20th century and both moved to IAS/Princeton in the 30s due to the rising anti-semiticism in Europe.
It is not worth an intelligent man's time to be in the majority. By
definition, there are already enough people to do that.