OverviewThis is an advanced course on natural language processing. Automatically processing natural language inputs and producing language outputs is a key component of Artificial General Intelligence. The ambiguities and noise inherent in human communication render traditional symbolic AI techniques ineffective for representing and analysing language data. Recently statistical techniques based on
This repository contains the lecture slides and course description for the Deep Natural Language Processing course offered in Hilary Term 2017 at the University of Oxford. This is an advanced course on natural language processing. Automatically processing natural language inputs and producing language outputs is a key component of Artificial General Intelligence. The ambiguities and noise inherent
Computational Algebraic Topology 2017/18 Course outline Official course website Lectures notes (lectures 1-4) SA-Lecture1 from 2017 SA-Lecture2 from 2017 SA-Lecture3 from 2017 SA-Lecture4 from 2017 SA-Lecture5 from 2017 SA-Lecture6 from 2017 Exercises for week 3 Exercises for week 6 Resources Reading for the core material and Topic A: Lecture notes for core material and Topic A from 2012 Lecture n
PASCAL VOC Challenge performance evaluation and download server Segmentation Results: VOC2012 BETA Competition "comp6" (train on own data) This leaderboard shows only those submissions that have been marked as public, and so the displayed rankings should not be considered as definitive.The highest scoring entry in each column is shown in bold.Clicking on the blue arrow symbol () at the top of a co
This is a quick page for information about Generalized-ICP Generalized-ICP is an extension of the popular Iteratitive Closest Point algorithm for aligning pointclouds. The approach is based on using anistropic cost functions to optimize the alignment after closest point assignments have been made. The paper can be found on the research section of my site. My C++ implementation of the alogorithm wh
Position: Director of the Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine and Professor of the History of Medicine Address: 45-47 Banbury Road, Oxford OX2 6PE Telephone: +44 (0)1865 284629 Fax: +44 (0)1865 274605 Email: mark.harrison(at)wuhmo.ox.ac.uk Research Interests Mark Harrison has published widely on the history of disease and medicine, especially in relation to the history of war and imperia
The Oxford Radcliffe Biobank (ORB) is a resource of tissue and blood samples donated by patients for use in medical research. The Biobank provides the ethical framework to collect and store samples according to regulatory requirements, and ensures fair access to the samples. Samples will be used for research studies which may contribute to increasing the knowledge and understanding of disease in o
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The HTS team of researchers is lead by Daniel Ebner. Major investment in the group has enabled the procurement of high end, state-of-the-art screening equipment; consisting of liquid handling automation, multiplatform plate readers and high content imaging equipment. This investment results in a facility which is able to produce highly complex and diverse screens. The aim of our high throughput sc
Live Cell Imaging with the Zeiss 510 Confocal A microscope Zeiss XL-3 stage incubation chamber (with temperature and CO2 control) for the Microscopy Core facility's Zeiss 510 MetaHead confocal microscope Overview State-of-the-art time-lapse imaging of living cells under the microscope requires the maintenance of the cell culture in suitable conditions for biological processes to continue normally.
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