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Cecile Paris


Cécile Paris' Advising Activities

Current:

Past:

  • Main PhD thesis supervisor: Einat Amitay, Ph.D. Student at Macquarie University, Australia. Completed Feb 2001. Thesis Title: “What lays in a layout: Using anchor-paragraph arrangements to extract descriptions of web documents” Einat received the Most Distinguished Australian PhD Dissertation  Award. Einat is now at the IBM research laboratory in Israel. (See "CMIS: Celebrating Success")

  • Co- Ph.D. thesis advisor: Maria Milosavljevic, Ph.D. Student at the Microsoft Research Institute, Macquarie University, Australia. Thesis Topic: Content Selection in Comparison Generation. Graduated March 2000.

  • Co- PhD thesis advisor: Judy Kay, Ph.D. Student at the Basser Department of Computer Science, Sydney University, Australia. Thesis Topic: Viewable User Models. Graduated 1999. Judy is still at the University of Sydney, now an Associate Professor.

  • Co- Ph.D. thesis advisor. Markus Fischer, Ph.D. Student at the ITRI, University of Brighton, UK. Thesis Topic: Temporal and Spatial Sequencing in Human-Computer Interaction. Graduated November 1998.

  • Main Ph.D. thesis advisor: Vibhu O. Mittal, Ph.D. Student at the University of Southern California, Department of Computer Science, Los Angeles, USA. Thesis topic: Integrating text and examples. Graduated in September 1993. Vibhu is a Senior Scientist at Google and an Adjunct Faculty in the Language Technology Institute in  the School of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University.

  • Co- Ph.D. thesis advisor: Johanna D. Moore, Ph.D Student at the University of California in Los Angeles   (UCLA), Department of Computer Science, Los Angeles, USA. Thesis topic: A Reactive Approach to Explanation in Expert and Advice-Giving Systems. Johanna Moore is now a Professor at Edinburgh University, in the Division of Informatics. She is Director of the Human-Communication Research Centre and the co-director of the Institute for Communicating and Collaborative Systems.

  • Ph.D. committee member: Michael Elhadad, Ph.D. Student at Columbia University, Department of Computer Science, New York, USA. Thesis topic: Generating Connectives to Express the Speaker's Argumentative Intent. Graduated in 1991; Michael is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Computer Science at Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Israel.
Research Interests Selected publications
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ict@csiro.au

 

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