András Kornai
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András Kornai (born 1957 in
Budapest Budapest (, ; ) is the capital and most populous city of Hungary. It is the ninth-largest city in the European Union by population within city limits and the second-largest city on the Danube river; the city has an estimated population o ...
), son of economist János Kornai, is a mathematical linguist. He has earned two
PhDs A Doctor of Philosophy (PhD, Ph.D., or DPhil; Latin: or ') is the most common degree at the highest academic level awarded following a course of study. PhDs are awarded for programs across the whole breadth of academic fields. Because it is ...
. He earned his first in Mathematics in 1983 from
Eötvös Loránd University Eötvös Loránd University ( hu, Eötvös Loránd Tudományegyetem, ELTE) is a Hungarian public research university based in Budapest. Founded in 1635, ELTE is one of the largest and most prestigious public higher education institutions in Hung ...
in Budapest, where his advisor was
Miklós Ajtai Miklós Ajtai (born 2 July 1946) is a computer scientist at the IBM Almaden Research Center, United States. In 2003, he received the Knuth Prize for his numerous contributions to the field, including a classic sorting network algorithm (deve ...
, and his second in Linguistics in 1991 from
Stanford University Stanford University, officially Leland Stanford Junior University, is a private research university in Stanford, California. The campus occupies , among the largest in the United States, and enrolls over 17,000 students. Stanford is conside ...
, where his advisor was
Paul Kiparsky René Paul Victor Kiparsky (born January 28, 1941) is a Finnish professor of linguistics at Stanford University. He is the son of the Russian-born linguist and Slavicist Valentin Kiparsky. Kiparsky is especially known for his contributions ...
. He is a professor in the Department of Algebra at the Budapest Institute of Technology, where he works on an open source Hungarian morphological analyzer. He was Chief Scientist at
MetaCarta MetaCarta is a software company that developed one of the first search engines to use a map to find unstructured documents. The product uses natural language processing to georeference text for customers in defense, intelligence, homeland securi ...
, where he worked on
information extraction Information extraction (IE) is the task of automatically extracting structured information from unstructured and/or semi-structured machine-readable documents and other electronically represented sources. In most of the cases this activity concer ...
before the company was acquired by
Nokia Nokia Corporation (natively Nokia Oyj, referred to as Nokia) is a Finnish multinational telecommunications, information technology, and consumer electronics corporation, established in 1865. Nokia's main headquarters are in Espoo, Finland, i ...
. Prior to MetaCarta, he was Chief Scientist at Northern Light. He is on the board of the journal ''Grammars'' and YourAmigo PLC. His research interests include all mathematical aspects of
natural language processing Natural language processing (NLP) is an interdisciplinary subfield of linguistics, computer science, and artificial intelligence concerned with the interactions between computers and human language, in particular how to program computers to proc ...
,
speech recognition Speech recognition is an interdisciplinary subfield of computer science and computational linguistics that develops methodologies and technologies that enable the recognition and translation of spoken language into text by computers with the ...
, and OCR. As Area Editor he was responsible for the Mathematical Linguistics area of the ''Oxford International Encyclopedia of Linguistics'', and his joint work with
Geoffrey Pullum Geoffrey Keith Pullum (; born 8 March 1945) is a British and American linguist specialising in the study of English. He is Professor Emeritus of General Linguistics at the University of Edinburgh. Pullum is a co-author of ''The Cambridge Gram ...

"The X-bar Theory of Phrase Structure"
formally reconstructed that then-popular linguistic theory.


Monographs

*''Semantics''. Springer Nature, 2020. *''Mathematical Linguistics''. Springer Verlag, in the series Advanced Information and Knowledge Processing, November 2007. Hardbound, approximately 300 pages. Se
description
*''Formal Phonology''. In the series Outstanding Dissertations in Linguistics, Garland Publishing, 1994, , hardbound, 240 page
Contents, Preface, Introduction (20 pages)
*''On Hungarian Morphology''. In the series Linguistica, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 1994, , paperbound, 174 page
Contents, Preface, Introduction (10 pages)


Books edited

*''Oxford International Encyclopedia of Linguistics'' (Mathematical Linguistics Area Editor under Editor in Chief William Frawley). 4 volumes, Oxford University Press, 2003, . *''Proceedings of the HLT-NAACL Workshop on the Analysis of Geographic References''. Jointly with Beth Sundheim. Association for Computational Linguistics, 2003, (WS9), paperbound, vi+81 pages. Se
related material
*''Extended Finite State Models of Language'' (editor). In the series Studies in Natural Language Processing, Cambridge University Press, 1999, , hardbound, x+278 page
Contents, Introduction (7 pages)


Selected papers

* Digital Language Death. PLoS ONE 8(10): e77056, 2012

* Hunmorph: open source word analysis (Jointly with V. Tron, Gy. Gyepesi, P. Halacsy, L. Nemeth, and D. Varga). In ''Proc. ACL 2005 Software Workshop'' 77-8

* Leveraging the open source ispell codebase for minority language analysis (Jointly with P. Halacsy, L. Nemeth, A. Rung, I. Szakadat, and V. Tron). In ''J. Carson-Berndsen'' (ed): Proc. SALTMIL 2004 56-5

* Explicit Finitism, ''International Journal of Theoretical Physics'' 2003/2 301-30

* Mathematical Linguistics (Jointly with G.K. Pullum) In W. Frawley (ed): ''Oxford International Encyclopedia of Linguistics'', Oxford University Press 2003, v3 17-2

* Optical Character Recognition, In W. Frawley (ed): ''Oxford International Encyclopedia of Linguistics'', Oxford University Press 2003, v3 33-3

* How many words are there? Glottometrics 2002/4 61-8

* Zipf's law outside the middle range ''Proc. Sixth Meeting on Mathematics of Language'' University of Central Florida, 1999 347-35

* A Robust, Language-Independent OCR System. (Jointly with Z. Lu, I. Bazzi, J. Makhoul, P. Natarajan, and R. Schwartz) In: Robert J. Mericsko (ed): Proc. 27th AIPR Workshop: Advances in Computer-Assisted Recognition SPIE Proceedings 3584 199

* Quantitative Comparison of Languages. ''Grammars'' 1998/2 155-16

* The generative power of feature geometry. ''Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence'' 8 1993 37-4

* The X-bar Theory of Phrase Structure. (Jointly with G.K. Pullum) ''Language'' 66 1990 24-5


References


External links


Kornai's home page

Kornai's departmental page