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INESC-ID operates in the following scientific areas: AI for People & Society, Automated Reasoning & Software Reliability, Communication Networks, Distributed, Parallel & Secure Systems, Green Energy & Smart Converters, Graphics & Interaction, Human Language Technologies, High Performance Computing, Architectures & Systems, Information & Decision Support Systems, Nano-Electronic Circuits & Systems, and Sustainable Power Systems.
INESC-ID operates in the following scientific areas: AI for People & Society, Automated Reasoning & Software Reliability, Communication Networks, Distributed, Parallel & Secure Systems, Green Energy & Smart Converters, Graphics & Interaction, Human Language Technologies, High Performance Computing, Architectures & Systems, Information & Decision Support Systems, Nano-Electronic Circuits & Systems, and Sustainable Power Systems.


The Human Language Technology laboratory, as a congregation of people working on human language technology and related matters, is the natural evolution of the Spoken Language Systems Laboratory (L²F), a laboratory created in 2001, to bring together several research groups of INESC and independent researchers that could potentially add relevant contributions to the area of computational processing of spoken language for European Portuguese. The long term goal of L²F was to bridge the gap between natural spoken language and the underlying semantic information.
The Human Language Technology laboratory, as a congregation of people working on human language technology and related matters, is the natural evolution of the Spoken Language Systems Laboratory (L²F), a laboratory created in 2001, to bring together several research groups of INESC and independent researchers to contribute to the area of computational processing of spoken language for European Portuguese. The long term goal of L²F was to bridge the gap between natural spoken language and the underlying semantic information.


The HLT laboratory includes about 30 researchers, most of them either university professors or graduate students. Their background ranges from Electrical Engineering to Computer Science and Linguistics (the latter through the cooperation with the [http://www.clul.ul.pt/ Center of Linguistics of the University of Lisbon] – CLUL). This strongly interdisciplinary group is actively involved in many areas of language research and development,  both spoken and written, including, but limited to, speech recognition, speech synthesis, speech coding, speech understanding, audio indexation, multimodal dialogue systems, language and dialect identification, speech-to-speech machine translation, automatic summarization, natural language database interfaces, natural language generation, text simplification, named entity retrieval, question answering, among others.
The HLT laboratory includes researchers/faculty from various universities, as well as graduate and post-graduate researchers. Their background ranges from Electrical Engineering, to Computer Science, and Linguistics. This strongly interdisciplinary group is actively involved in many areas of language research and development,  both spoken and written, including, without limitation, speech recognition, speech synthesis, speech coding, speech understanding, audio indexing, multimodal dialogue systems, language and dialect identification, speech-to-speech machine translation, automatic summarization, natural language database interfaces, natural language generation, text simplification, named entity recognition, question answering, among others and in no particular order.
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The expertise in these core technologies is integrated into 3 main research strands: semantic processing of multimedia contents, spoken/multimodal dialogue systems and speech-to-speech translation. The original focus on European Portuguese has now been broadened to encompass all varieties of Portuguese. Two application areas also deserve our special attention: e-learning and e-inclusion, namely in the development of alternative and augmentative communication tools for people with special needs.
The expertise in these core technologies is integrated into 3 main research strands: semantic processing of multimedia contents, spoken/multimodal dialogue systems and speech-to-speech translation. The original focus on European Portuguese has now been broadened to encompass all varieties of Portuguese. Two application areas also deserve our special attention: e-learning and e-inclusion, namely in the development of alternative and augmentative communication tools for people with special needs.

Revision as of 08:39, 11 February 2020

INESC-ID is an R&D institute dedicated to advanced research and development in the fields of Information Technologies, Electronics, Communications, and Energy. It is a non-profit institution, privately owned by IST and INESC, officially declared of public interest. It was created in 2000, as a result of a reorganization of INESC, an institution which also played a pioneering role at the national level both in research and in the creation of SMEs. In 2004, INESC-ID was recognized by the Portuguese Government as an "Associated Laboratory".

INESC-ID incorporates a body of highly qualified researchers, including more than 70 researchers holding a PhD and numerous post-graduate students. The majority of the PhD researchers are university professors. This body of researchers enables INESC-ID to act in the different phases of the R&D process. The intense activity developed by INESC-ID resulted in a large number of scientific papers published in specialized journals and international conferences, industrial prototypes, and computer systems based on state-of-art technologies, as well as a number of patents and awards.

INESC-ID operates in the following scientific areas: AI for People & Society, Automated Reasoning & Software Reliability, Communication Networks, Distributed, Parallel & Secure Systems, Green Energy & Smart Converters, Graphics & Interaction, Human Language Technologies, High Performance Computing, Architectures & Systems, Information & Decision Support Systems, Nano-Electronic Circuits & Systems, and Sustainable Power Systems.

The Human Language Technology laboratory, as a congregation of people working on human language technology and related matters, is the natural evolution of the Spoken Language Systems Laboratory (L²F), a laboratory created in 2001, to bring together several research groups of INESC and independent researchers to contribute to the area of computational processing of spoken language for European Portuguese. The long term goal of L²F was to bridge the gap between natural spoken language and the underlying semantic information.

The HLT laboratory includes researchers/faculty from various universities, as well as graduate and post-graduate researchers. Their background ranges from Electrical Engineering, to Computer Science, and Linguistics. This strongly interdisciplinary group is actively involved in many areas of language research and development, both spoken and written, including, without limitation, speech recognition, speech synthesis, speech coding, speech understanding, audio indexing, multimodal dialogue systems, language and dialect identification, speech-to-speech machine translation, automatic summarization, natural language database interfaces, natural language generation, text simplification, named entity recognition, question answering, among others and in no particular order.