List of Apertium mentors
We know that some people might be interested in working on Apertium, but not know where to start. We have lots of documentation, but sometimes what you really want to do is sit down and have a chat and ask questions with someone who knows a lot about the project. You might want to tell them what your skills are, what you think you are good at, and ask if they have any ideas for how you might get started. That's where Apertium mentors come in!
If you decide to contact one of our mentors, the best way would be either on IRC, or by emailing them. Each mentor has a link next to their name that allows you to write them an email (but you'll need an account on the Wiki first!).
Each of our mentors has a list of languages which they speak (in bold) and which they understand, so you can communicate in the language which you prefer.
Mentor profiles
Photo | Name | IRC nick | Language(s) | Interests | Bio |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Francis Morton Tyers (wiki · email) |
spectie, spectei, spectre | english, castellano, català, français |
Under-resourced, regional, and marginalised languages. | I'm a PhD student at the Universitat d'Alacant. Apart from machine translation, I'm interested in rule-based approaches to morphological analysis and disambiguation, dependency grammars and lexical selection. | |
Kevin Brubeck Unhammer (wiki · email) |
unhammer, unhammerd, rehammer | norsk, english, deutsch, nederlands |
Rule-based NLP, marginalised languages. | I've worked mostly on Norwegian and Sámi language pairs in Apertium, as well as Constraint Grammar disambiguation, but take an interest in pretty much anything related to natural language text processing. | |
Jonathan North Washington (wiki · email) |
firespeaker, jonorthwash, kd5cfx | english, қазақша, кыргызча, русский, татарча, ўзбекча/o'zbekcha, türkçe, халха/монгол, français, español |
Phonetics/phonology, language documentation, Turkic languages | I'm a Ph.D. student at Indiana University. I work mainly on phonetics, phonology, historical linguistics, and language documentation, and am most interested in Turkic languages. My relevant strengths are in developing computational morphologies and phonologies using lexc and twol. | |
Jacob Nordfalk (wiki · email) |
jacobEo | dansk, esperanto, norsk, english, svenska, deutsch, nepali |
java, mobile computing, esperanto | I am an associate professor in computer science. I've worked mostly on the Esperanto-English and a little on Swedish-Danish pairs in Apertium, as well as the core code (lttoolbox-java), Android, dixtools. | |
Gianluca Grossi (wiki) |
zfe | italiano, american, türkçe english |
mobile computing, modern Anatolian Turkish, Italian, Latin | I am teaching Italian in Istanbul. I've worked mostly on Turkish (see turmorph). Interested in potential uses of apertium on iOS platform, dictionaries fetishist. | |
Mikel L. Forcada (wiki · email) |
mlforcada | euskara, català. español, english, português, français, italiano, hrvatsko-bosansko-srpski; esperanto, interlingua |
finite-state theory, machine translation and computer-aided translation | Professor of Computer Science at the Universitat d'Alacant (Spain). | |
Juan Antonio Pérez-Ortiz (wiki · email) |
japerez | català, español, english | machine translation, computer-aided translation, web interfaces for machine translation | Associate professor of Computer Science at the Universitat d'Alacant (Spain). | |
Per Tunedal (wiki · email) |
not a friend of IRC | svenska, français, english norsk, español, deutsch, dansk |
machine translation, computer-aided translation, human translation | Civil Engineer (Urban planning) & Language student (Sweden). | |
Trond Trosterud (wiki · email) |
ttr000 | norsk, suomi, english deutsch, ... |
morphological analysis, machine translation, minority languages | Linguist (Norway). |