Madeleine Ashcraft Bates (born c. 1948) is a researcher in natural language processing who worked at BBN Technologies in Cambridge, Massachusetts from the early 1970s to the late 1990s.[1] She was president of the Association for Computational Linguistics in 1985,[2] and co-editor of the book Challenges in Natural Language Processing (1993).[3]

Education and career

Bates was a student at Allegheny College before transferring to Carnegie Mellon University,[4] where she majored in mathematics, graduating in 1968. She completed her Ph.D. in applied mathematics at Harvard University in 1975,[5] working there with Bill Woods on augmented transition networks.[6]

While a student at Harvard, she began working part-time at BBN in 1971. After completing her Ph.D., she was an assistant professor at Boston University for three years before becoming a full-time researcher at BBN.[5]

Personal life

Bates married chemist Alan Hunt Bates in summer 1968;[4] he later became a professor at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. Her mother, Madeleine DeMuth Ashcraft (died 1990), was a long-term sufferer of Huntington's disease,[7] and Bates has been an activist for the treatment of Huntington's disease, serving as president of the Massachusetts Chapter of the committee to Combat Huntington's Disease.[8]

Selected publications

References

  1. ^ "Author biographies", Voice Communication Between Humans and Machines, National Academies Press, 1994, p. 515
  2. ^ Past officers, Association for Computational Linguistics, retrieved 2021-04-27
  3. ^ Reviews of Challenges in Natural Language Processing:
  4. ^ a b "Plans Made For Wedding Next Summer", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, p. 23, 1 December 1967 – via Newspapers.com
  5. ^ a b "Contributors", IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, SMC-12 (2): 237, March–April 1982, doi:10.1109/TSMC.1982.4308807
  6. ^ Woods, W. A. (December 1969), Augmented Transition Networks for Natural Language Analysis: Report No. CS-1 to the National Science Foundation, p. iv, with the help of Mrs. Madeleine Bates, a graduate student who did much of the grammar development for the parser
  7. ^ "Ashcraft, Madeleine Demuth", Death notices, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, p. 4, 28 June 1990 – via Newspapers.com
  8. ^ "Testimony of Madeleine Bates, president, CCHD, Boston, Massachusetts", Report of the Commission for the Control of Huntington's Diseases and Its Consequences, Volume IV, Part 2 – Public Testimony, Ann Arbor, Atlanta, Boston, National Institutes of Health, October 1977, pp. 2–736
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