People in cafeJean Paoli
speakingAmsterdam rooftopsXTech delegats
XTech 2007: “The Ubiquitous Web”15-18 May 2007, Paris, France
Your account


(?)
XTech 2007 news

Subscribe to receive news about XTech

Partners





Sponsors


Organized by

Conference Chair

Co-Hosts

Event software by Expectnation

Henry S Thompson

University of Edinburgh

Henry S. Thompson divides his time between the School of Informatics at the University of Edinburgh, where he is Reader in Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive Science, based in the Language Technology Group of the Human Communication Research Centre, and the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), where he works in the XML Activity.

He received his Ph.D. in Linguistics from the University of California at Berkeley in 1980. His university education was divided between Linguistics and Computer Science, in which he holds an M.Sc. While still at Berkeley he was affiliated with the Natural Language Research Group at the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, where he participated in the GUS and KRL projects. His research interests have ranged widely, including natural language parsing, speech recognition, machine translation evaluation, modelling human lexical access mechanisms, the fine structure of human-human dialogue, language resource creation and architectures for linguistic annotation. His current research is focussed on the semantics of markup, XML pipelines and more generally articulating and extending the architectures of XML.

He was a member of the SGML Working Group of the World Wide Web Consortium which designed XML, a major contributor to the core concepts of XSLT and W3C XML Schema and is currently a member of the XML Core, XML Schema and XML Processing Model Working Groups of the W3C. He has been elected twice to the W3C TAG (Technical Architecture Group). He is lead editor of the Structures part of the XML Schema W3C Recommendation, for which he co-wrote the first publicly available implementation, XSV. He has presented many papers and tutorials on SGML, DSSSL, XML, XSLT, XML Schema and XML Pipelines in both industrial and public settings over the last ten years.

Sessions

Core technology Concorde-Invalides
Henry S Thompson (University of Edinburgh)
To define an XML language, first we map from XML to abstract data model. We can formalise this step using UML, OWL and GRDDL. The new XML Processing Model language is used to illustrate. Read more.