Publications
A Voice-Enabled Procedure Browser for the International Space Station.
Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL 2005). 29-32.
(2005). Vowel Height is Intimately Associated with Stress Accent in Spontaneous American English Discourse.
Proceedings of the 7th European Conference on Speech Communication and Technology (Eurospeech 2001).
(2001). We Still Don't Have Secure Cross-Domain Requests: an Empirical Study of CORS.
Proceedings of USENIX Security Symposium.
(2018).
(2014). Web Caching and Zipf-Like Distributions: Evidence and Implications.
Proceedings of the Eighteenth Annual Joint Conference of the IEEE Computer and Communications Societies (INFOCOM '99). 1, 126-134.
(1999).
(2010).
(2011). The Weft: A Representation for Periodic Sounds.
The 22nd International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing (ICASSP 1997). 2, 1307-1310.
(1997).
(2009). Weighted SGD for ℓp Regression with Randomized Preconditioning.
Proceedings of the 27th Annual SODA Conference. 558-569.
(2015). “What Can’t Data Be Used For?” Privacy Expectations about Smart TVs in the U.S..
Proceedings of the 3rd European Workshop on Usable Security (EuroUSEC).
(2018). What just happened? Evaluating retrofitted distributional word vectors.
Proceedings of the 2019 Annual Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies (NAACL-HLT).
(2019).
(2008).
(2013).
(2011).
(2011). When a Mismatch Can Be Good: Large Vocabulary Speech Recognition Trained with Idealized Tandem Features.
1574-1577.
(2008).
(2014).
(2012). Where is natural language understanding? Toward context-dependent utterance interpretation.
Proceedings of the 7th Annual Conference on Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing AMLaP.
(2001). Whither Speech Technology? - A Twenty-First Century Perspective.
Proceedings of the 7th European Conference on Speech Communication and Technology (Eurospeech 2001).
(2001). Who is "You"? Combining Linguistic and Gaze Features to Resolve Second-Person References in Dialogue.
273-281.
(2009).
(2009). Whorf Hypothesis Is Supported in the Right Visual Field but Not The Left.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 103(2), 489-494.
(2006). Why Is ASR Harder For Fast Speech And What Can We Do About It?.
IEEE Snowbird Workshop '95.
(1995).