Lori Levin

Lori Levin
Born
Lorraine Susan Levin
Alma mater
Scientific career
Fields
Institutions

Lorraine Susan (Lori) Levin is an American computer scientist and computational linguist specializing in natural language processing, particularly involving syntax, morphosyntax, and languages with small corpora. She is a research professor in the Language Technologies Institute of the Carnegie Mellon University School of Computer Science,[1] and one of the founders of the North American Computational Linguistics Open Competition.[2]

Education and career

Levin has a 1979 bachelor's degree in linguistics (summa cum laude) from the University of Pennsylvania, and a 1986 Ph.D. in linguistics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[3] Her dissertation, Operations on Lexical Forms: Unaccusative Rules in Germanic Languages, was jointly supervised by Joan Bresnan and Kenneth L. Hale.[4]

She worked as an assistant professor of linguistics at the University of Pittsburgh from 1983 until 1988, when she joined the Carnegie Mellon University Language Technologies Institute.[3]

Recognition

Levin was named as a Fellow of the Association for Computational Linguistics in 2025, "for pioneering work on the use of phonetics, syntax, lexical semantics and dialogue modeling in machine translation and in the transfer of NLP technologies to low resource languages, as well as an enduring contribution to the North American Computational Linguistics Olympiad".[5]

References

  1. ^ "Lori Levin", Faculty, CMU Language Technologies Institute, retrieved 2026-02-24
  2. ^ "About NACLO", North American Computational Linguistics Open Competition, retrieved 2026-02-24
  3. ^ a b "Brief biography" (PDF), Robust parsing proposal for KDI 99, Carnegie Mellon University, 1999, retrieved 2026-02-24
  4. ^ Lori Levin at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  5. ^ ACL Fellows 2025, Association for Computational Linguistics, retrieved 2026-02-24