2007 North American Computational Linguistics Olympiad

Contestants




Past winner comment

Former competition winner Alexandra Aikhenvald, a linguist now working on Amazonian and Papua New Guinean languages at Latrobe University, Australia, attests that "these Olympics... were a very effective means of getting high school students acquainted with linguistic problems (some of them I used myself when teaching linguistics in Brazil and in Australia). And this was a way of luring people into linguistics." (Language 80(2):201(2004)).

History of Linguistic Challenges

The idea of holding academic Challenges in linguistics stems from a long tradition of linguistics and mathematics competitions, which began in Moscow in the 1960s. In 1984, Bulgaria began holding similar competitions, and contests were first held in the United States at the University of Oregon starting in 1998. Bulgaria hosted the First International Olympiad in Linguistics in Borovetz in September of 2003, and subsequent International Olympiads have been held in Moscow, Russia in 2004, Leiden, The Netherlands in 2005, and in Tartu, Estonia in 2006. More recently, universities in Estonia, Finland, Netherlands, the United States, and other countries have begun sponsoring such outreach activities aimed at high school students. Participating as individuals and in country teams, students are given challenging sets of language data and language puzzles to solve, with the chance to win prizes and international recognition. Students learn about the richness, diversity and systematicity of language, while exercising natural logic and reasoning skills. No prior knowledge of languages or linguistics is necessary, but the competitions have proven very successful in attracting top students to study in the field of linguistics and computational linguistics.

The North American Computational Linguistics Olympiad picks up on this long tradition, with a focus on computational thinking as it relates to solving linguistics problems. In addition to the traditional linguistics problems, NAMCLO endeavors to introduce students to computational problem solving as it relates specifically to natural language data.

The Linguistics Challenge
University of Oregon, Thomas Payne, Organizer

The Fourth International Linguistics Olympiad
University of Tartu, Estonia, Reeli Torn and Olga Gerassimenko, Organizers

Olympiad Locations

Organizing Committee

Pittsburgh area (hosted by Carnegie Mellon University)
contact: Lori Levin, lslcs.cmu.edu
Lori Levin (General Chair), Carnegie Mellon University
 
Philadelphia area (hosted by U. of Pennsylvania)
contact: Mitch Marcus, mitchcis.upenn.edu
Thomas Payne (General Chair), University of Oregon
 
Boston area (hosted by Brandies Univeristy, Cambridge)
contact: James Pustejovsky, boston.olympiadgmail.com
Dragomir R. Radev (Program Chair), University of Michigan
 
Ithaca area (hosted by Cornell University)
contact: Claire Cardie, cardiecs.cornell.edu
William Lewis (Outreach Chair), University of Washington
 
Online participation
contact: Dragomir R. Radev, radevumich.edu
James Pustejovsky (Sponsorship Chair), Brandeis University
Barbara Di Eugenio (Follow-up Chair), University of Illinois at Chicago
Supported by NSF                                             Website Developed by The LINGUIST List                                                          The Association for Computational Linguistics                               Google
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