Research News:
This is probably going to be among the few times, my research is spoken about.
Here is a link to an article describing my research and getting cited on this one was pretty cool too!.
Courses @ UW-Madison:
Here is a list of courses I liked the most at UW-Madison,
NLP conferences:
Consensus among NLP researchers points to the following as some of the most important NLP conferences,
Conference Vs Journal:
I often find myself explaining to others from the scientific community something that is common knowledge among computer science-y research. Unlike conventional science programs, graduate students in CS and related fields publish in conferences as a first preference and then journals. Why you ask?. Unlike other fields, within CS, conferences are ranked much higher and are much harder to get in (premier conferences have acceptance rates close to 20%). If you are unwilling to believe me, look at the h5 indices of conferences and journals in CS and NLP.
Programming Languages and Deep Learning:
Python and PyTorch all the way!!. I personally prefer to code in Python and PyTorch and you will see that all my codes are in these languages. However, if you asked really really nicely, I will code in MATLAB.
Humor and Philosophy in Grad School:
Grad school is like the academic Iron Man race, so I find myself at the mercy of humorous cartoon strips and some philosophical book reading. I regularly read the PhD comics and Zen pencils (this one nails it for me) for some laughs and soul stirring.
While one cannot really ever bring it down to just two books, the two books I turn to for comfort, lessons and hope when down in grad school are 1) The Old Man and The Sea (Ernest Hemingway) and 2) A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (Betty Smith). Actually, there is one more, When Breath Becomes Air (Paul Kalanithi).
Link to Git:
This link is to my git repositories.
Resume:
Coming Soon
My advisors' research:
Misc:
The picture on the homepage is a view of the Santorini Caldera from a recent vacation to Greece.
This is probably going to be among the few times, my research is spoken about.
Here is a link to an article describing my research and getting cited on this one was pretty cool too!.
Courses @ UW-Madison:
Here is a list of courses I liked the most at UW-Madison,
- ECE 532 Theory and Applications of Pattern Recognition (I am not sure if this course goes by the same name anymore).
- ECE 817 Nonlinear Systems.
- ECE 729 Theory of Information Processing and Transmission.
NLP conferences:
Consensus among NLP researchers points to the following as some of the most important NLP conferences,
- ACL.
- EMNLP.
- NAACL-HLT.
- CONLL.
- COLING.
Conference Vs Journal:
I often find myself explaining to others from the scientific community something that is common knowledge among computer science-y research. Unlike conventional science programs, graduate students in CS and related fields publish in conferences as a first preference and then journals. Why you ask?. Unlike other fields, within CS, conferences are ranked much higher and are much harder to get in (premier conferences have acceptance rates close to 20%). If you are unwilling to believe me, look at the h5 indices of conferences and journals in CS and NLP.
Programming Languages and Deep Learning:
Python and PyTorch all the way!!. I personally prefer to code in Python and PyTorch and you will see that all my codes are in these languages. However, if you asked really really nicely, I will code in MATLAB.
Humor and Philosophy in Grad School:
Grad school is like the academic Iron Man race, so I find myself at the mercy of humorous cartoon strips and some philosophical book reading. I regularly read the PhD comics and Zen pencils (this one nails it for me) for some laughs and soul stirring.
While one cannot really ever bring it down to just two books, the two books I turn to for comfort, lessons and hope when down in grad school are 1) The Old Man and The Sea (Ernest Hemingway) and 2) A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (Betty Smith). Actually, there is one more, When Breath Becomes Air (Paul Kalanithi).
Link to Git:
This link is to my git repositories.
Resume:
Coming Soon
My advisors' research:
Misc:
The picture on the homepage is a view of the Santorini Caldera from a recent vacation to Greece.