Yejin Choi
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Yejin Choi
Summary
Yejin Choi is a human[1]. She worked as a computer scientist[2], computational linguist[3], academic[4], and university teacher[5]. She ranks in the top 0.72% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (148 views/month, #7,234 of 1,000,298).[6]
Key Facts
- Yejin Choi held citizenship in South Korea[7].
- Yejin Choi's professions included computer scientist[2].
- Yejin Choi worked as a computational linguist[3].
- Yejin Choi worked as an academic[4].
- Yejin Choi worked as a university teacher[5].
- Yejin Choi's field of work was computational linguistics[8].
- Yejin Choi's field of work was artificial intelligence[9].
- Among Yejin Choi's employers was University of Washington[10].
- Yejin Choi was employed by Stony Brook University[11].
- Yejin Choi was educated at Seoul National University[12].
- Yejin Choi was educated at Cornell University[13].
- Yejin Choi's doctoral advisor was Claire Cardie[14].
- Yejin Choi received the MacArthur Fellows Program[15].
- Yejin Choi received the Marr Prize[16].
- Yejin Choi is recorded as female[17].
- Yejin Choi's instance of is recorded as human[18].
- Yejin Choi supervised Chloé Kiddon as a doctoral student[19].
- Yejin Choi supervised Antoine Bosselut as a doctoral student[20].
- Yejin Choi supervised Eunsol Choi as a doctoral student[21].
- Yejin Choi supervised Hannah Rashkin as a doctoral student[22].
- Yejin Choi supervised Rowan Zellers as a doctoral student[23].
- Yejin Choi's family name is recorded as Choi[24].
- Yejin Choi's given name is recorded as Ye-jin[25].
- Yejin Choi's official website is recorded as https://homes.cs.washington.edu/~yejin/[26].
- Yejin Choi's affiliation is recorded as Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence[27].
Product Details
The following facts are restated verbatim from public-domain and CC0 open-data sources — every line is independently verifiable against the named source's catalog.
MusicBrainz — CC0 open music encyclopedia
Body
Education
Educated at Seoul National University[12], a national university[31], in South Korea[32], founded in 1946[33], headquartered in Seoul[34] and Cornell University[13], a private university[35], in United States[36], founded in 1865[37], headquartered in Ithaca[38]. Yejin Choi's doctoral advisor was Claire Cardie[14].
Career and Affiliations
Recorded occupations include computer scientist[2], computational linguist[3], academic[4], and university teacher[5]. Fields of work include computational linguistics[8], an interdisciplinary science[39] and artificial intelligence[9], a type of technology[40]. Employers include University of Washington[10], a public research university[41], in United States[42], founded in 1861[43] and Stony Brook University[11], a public university[44], in United States[45], founded in 1957[46], headquartered in Stony Brook University[47]. Doctoral students include Chloé Kiddon[19], a computer scientist[48]; Antoine Bosselut[20], a computer scientist[49]; Eunsol Choi[21], a computer scientist[50], of South Korea[51]; Hannah Rashkin[22], a computer scientist[52]; and Rowan Zellers[23], a computer scientist[53].
Recognition
Awards received include MacArthur Fellows Program[15], a science award[54], in United States[55], founded in 1981[56] and Marr Prize[16], an award[57], in United States[58], founded in 1987[59].
Why It Matters
Yejin Choi ranks in the top 0.72% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (148 views/month, #7,234 of 1,000,298).[6]
Her notable doctoral advisees include Rowan Zellers[60], a computer scientist[61]; Antoine Bosselut[62], a computer scientist[63]; Chloé Kiddon[64], a computer scientist[65]; Eunsol Choi[66], a computer scientist[67], of South Korea[68]; and Hannah Rashkin[69].
FAQs
What did Yejin Choi do for work?
Yejin Choi worked as computer scientist[2], computational linguist[3], academic[4], and university teacher[5].
Where did Yejin Choi go to school?
Yejin Choi was educated at Seoul National University[12] and Cornell University[13].
What awards did Yejin Choi receive?
Honors received include MacArthur Fellows Program[15] and Marr Prize[16].