Kimmo Koskenniemi

Kimmo Matti Koskenniemi (born 7 September 1945[1][2]) is the inventor of finite-state two-level models for computational phonology and morphology and a professor of Computational Linguistics at the University of Helsinki, Finland. In the early 1980s Koskenniemi's work became accessible by early adopters such as Lauri Karttunen, Ronald M. Kaplan and Martin Kay, first at the University of Texas Austin,[3] later at the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center.[4]

Kimmo Koskenniemi, 2012

This application of finite-state transducers to phonology and morphology was initially implemented for Finnish, but it soon proved to be useful for other languages with complex morphology such as Basque [5] and Swahili.[6]

Bibliography

  • Koskenniemi, Kimmo 1983: Two-level morphology : a general computational model for word-form recognition and production. Publications (Helsingin yliopisto. Yleisen kieliteteen laitos 11)
gollark: How does it do varargs in Haskell then?
gollark: Valvate: also F#.
gollark: Yes, but the amount of hackery to make it work is insane.
gollark: Due to some insane Haskellers again.
gollark: Haskell's got it, even.

References

  1. Karlsson, Fred. "Kimmo Koskenniemi's first 60 years" (PDF). Retrieved 2007-10-07.
  2. "Twenty-Five Years of Finite-State Morphology" (PDF). Stanford: CSLI Publications. 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-10-16.
  3. "Texas Linguistic Forum 22, 1983".
  4. "A Compiler for Two-level Phonological Rules" (PDF). Stanford: Center for the Study of Language and Information. 1987.
  5. "Xuxen: A Spelling Checker/Corrector for Basque based in Two-Level Morphology". Povo Trento: Proceedings of NAACL-ANLP'92. 1992. Archived from the original on 2013-06-20.
  6. "A. Hurskainen. A Two-Level Computer Formalism for the Analysis of Bantu Morphology. An Application to Swahili 1992. NJAS 1:1".



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