Martin Porter

For the musician, see Martin Porter (musician).

Martin F. Porter is the inventor of the Porter Stemmer,[1] one of the most common algorithms for stemming English,[2][3] and the Snowball programming framework. His 1980 paper "An algorithm for suffix stripping", proposing the stemming algorithm, has been cited over 8000 times (Google Scholar)[4]

The Muscat search engine comes from research performed by Porter at the University of Cambridge and was commercialized in 1984 by Cambridge CD Publishing; it was subsequently sold to MAID which became the Dialog Corporation.[5]

In 2000 he was awarded the Tony Kent Strix award.[6]

Porter read mathematics at St John’s College, Cambridge (1963–66) and went to get a Diploma in Computer Science (1967) and a PhD. at Cambridge Computer Laboratory. He worked at the University of Leeds for a year before returning to Cambridge's Literary and Linguistic Computing Centre (1971-1974) and at the Sedgwick Museum as a programmer (1974-1976). In 1977, he became the Director of the Museum Documentation Advisory Unit (MDA).[7]

Martin Porter is co-founder of the contextual targeting and content recommendation company Grapeshot.[8]

References

  1. Porter Stemming Algorithm
  2. Christopher D. Manning, Prabhakar Raghavan and Hinrich Schütze (2008). Introduction to Information Retrieval. Cambridge University Press.
  3. Daniel Jurafsky and James H. Martin (2009). Speech and Language Processing. Pearson, p. 102.
  4. Articles at Google Scholar, accessed 2012-02-09.
  5. Avi Rappoport, Search Tools Consulting. "Smartlogik Discover (APR) - SearchTools Report". Searchtools.com. Retrieved 2012-02-09.
  6. UKeiIG Tony Kent Strix Award (Accessed Feb 2012)
  7. Museum, Vol XXX, n° 3/4, 1978, Museums and Computers p.224
  8. Grapeshot (Accessed Oct 2012)

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, February 20, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.