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. |