Richard Sproat is a computational linguist currently working for Google as a researcher on text normalization[2] and speech recognition.[1]

Richard William Sproat
Alma materUniversity of California, San Diego (B.A., 1981)
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Ph.D., 1985)[1]
Scientific career
FieldsComputational linguistics
InstitutionsGoogle (2012–present)
ThesisOn Deriving the Lexicon (1985)
Doctoral advisorKen Hale

Linguistics edit

Sproat graduated from Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1985, under the supervision of Kenneth L. Hale.[3] His PhD thesis is one of the earliest work that derives morphosyntactically complex forms from the module which produces the phonological form that realizes these morpho-syntactic expressions, one of the core ideas in Distributed Morphology.[4]

One of Sproat's main contributions to computational linguistics is in the field of text normalization, where his work with colleagues in 2001, Normalization of non-standard words,[5] was considered a seminal work in formalizing this component of speech synthesis systems. He has also worked on computational morphology[6] and the computational analysis of writing systems.[7]

External links edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Sproat, Richard. "Richard Sproat". Retrieved 29 November 2020.
  2. ^ Sodimana, Keshan; Silva, Pasindu De; Sproat, Richard; Theeraphol, A.; Li, Chen Fang; Gutkin, Alexander; Sarin, Supheakmungkol; Pipatsrisawat, Knot (2018). "Text Normalization for Bangla, Khmer, Nepali, Javanese, Sinhala and Sundanese Text-to-Speech Systems" (PDF). 6th Workshop on Spoken Language Technologies for Under-Resourced Languages (SLTU 2018). pp. 147–151. doi:10.21437/SLTU.2018-31. S2CID 53333966.
  3. ^ Sproat, Richard. "On Deriving the Lexicon". MITWPL. Retrieved 29 November 2020.
  4. ^ Wiltschko, Martina (24 July 2014). The Universal Structure of Categories: Towards a Formal Typology. Cambridge. p. 83. ISBN 9781107038516.
  5. ^ Sproat, Richard; Black, Alan W.; Chen, Stanley; Kumar, Shankar; Ostendorf, Mari; Richards, Christopher (1 July 2001). "Normalization of non-standard words". Computer Speech & Language. 15 (3): 287–333. doi:10.1006/csla.2001.0169.
  6. ^ Sproat, Richard (1992). Morphology and Computation. MIT Press. ISBN 9780262527026.
  7. ^ Sproat, Richard (2000). A Computational theory of Writing Systems. Cambridge. ISBN 9780521663403.