Nancy Ide
Nancy Ide is Professor of Computer Science at Vassar College. She has been an active researcher in the field of computational linguistics for over 30 years and has published copiously on topics including computational lexicography, word sense disambiguation, semantic web implementations of linguistically annotated data, and interoperable standards for representing language resources.1 In 1987, she co-founded the Text Encoding Initiative, which continues to be the major XML format for representing annotated humanities data.
In the early and mid-1990s she was project leader for two major European projects involving the creation and annotation of large-scale, multi-lingual corpora and the design and implementation of pipeline architectures for language processing tools. In this context she developed the XML Corpus Encoding Standard (XCES), which is a standard in the field.
She has been Principal Investigator on several National Science Foundation-funded projects, including a major effort to create a massive linguistically-annotated corpus of American English, the Open American National Corpus (OANC), and a manually annotated sub-corpus of the OANC (MASC); and an ongoing project to provide an easy-to-use platform including fully interoperable NLP tools and data, the Language Applications (LAPPS) Grid.
Dr. Ide serves on several sub-committees and working groups in the International Standards Organization (ISO) Technical Committee on Language Resource Management, and is the working group convener and principal architect of the ISO Linguistic Annotation Framework. Recently, she co-edited (with James Pustejovsky) and contributed several chapters to a 1300-page Handbook of Linguistic Annotation, published in 2017 by Springer.
Dr. Ide is the co-editor-in-chief of the Springer journal Language Resources and Evaluation, one of the premier journals in the field of computational linguistics. She is also editor of the Springer book series entitled Text, Speech, and Language Technology, which contains over 40 books on topics covering the full range of computational linguistics research. She is the co-founder and President of the Association for Computational Linguistics special interest group on Annotation (ACL-SIGANN). From 1985-1995 she was President of the Association for Computers and the Humanities, and served as co-editor for the journal Computers and the Humanities from 1996-2001 (since renamed as Language Resources and Evaluation).
1Partial list available at http://www.cs.vassar.edu/~ide/pubs.html