Alice H. Oh
200 Technology Square . Rm 812 . Cambridge, MA 02139
http://www.ai.mit.edu/~aoh/
aoh@ai.mit.edu
 

  EDUCATION
Candidate for Ph.D. in Computer Science
Research: Multimodal Human-Computer Interaction
Teaching: TA in Techniques in Artificial Intelligence
Courses inEmbodied Intelligence, Theory of Computation, Computer System Architecture, Techniques in Artificial Intelligence
February 2001 - Present
MIT
Artificial Intelligence Laboratory
M.S. in Language Technologies (May 2000)
Thesis: Stochastic Natural Language Generation for Spoken Dialog Systems
Courses in language and information technologies including Speech Recognition, Natural Language Processing, Language & Statistics, Machine Learning, and Information Retrieval.
Research in the Communicator Project, a task-oriented spoken dialog system, concentrating on corpus-based methods for natural language generation.
August 1998 - May 2000
Carnegie Mellon University
Language Technologies Institute
School of Computer Science
S.B. in Mathematics (June 1996)
Courses in applied and theoretical mathematics including probability, statistics, linear algebra, complex and real analysis.
August 1992 - June 1996
MIT

  EXPERIENCES
As a research staff member in the Speech Group, I worked on SpeechBot, a multimedia indexing and retrieval system for streaming audio and video on the World Wide Web. We conducted research on combining automatic speech recognition with information retrieval for a more robust multimedia indexing system. July 2000 - February 2001
Research Staff
Cambridge Research Laboratory
Compaq Computer Corporation
Worked in the Platform Technologies Division, porting various Oracle software documentation for different Unix platforms.  November 1997 - July 1998
Technical Writer
Oracle Corporation

 PUBLICATIONS
Alice Oh and Alex Rudnicky. Stochastic natural language generation for spoken dialog systems. Computer Speech and Language: Special Issue on Spoken Language Generation. To appear.

Alice Oh, Harold Fox, Max Van Kleek, Aaron Adler, Krzysztof Gajos, Louis-Philippe Morency, and Trevor Darrell. Evaluating Look-to-Talk: a gaze-aware interface in a collaborative environment. Proceedings of ACM Conference on Human Factors and Computing Systems, CHI 2002. Minneapolis, MN, 2002. To appear.

 SKILLS
Programming in C, Perl, Java.
Fluent in Korean and English.

 REFERENCES
Furnished upon request.


Last Updated: Feb 8, 2002 by Alice Oh