John Nerbonne is an American computational linguist. He was a professor of humanities computing at the University of Groningen until January 2017, when he gave his valedictory address at the celebration of the 30th anniversary of his department there.
Nerbonne's research has ranged broadly within Linguistics and Computational Linguistics. His Ph.D. thesis was completed under the supervision of David Dowty and concerns the syntax and semantics of temporal expressions in German. The grammar fragment there served as the basis for a number of early computational implementations of Generalized Phrase Structure Grammar, e.g., in Berlin and Stuttgart and led to several journal publications. After his Ph.D. he pursued computational linguistics in an applied setting, at Hewlett-Packard Labs, where he supervised linguistic work. His work includes both theoretical and applied topics in computational linguistics, including detecting syntactic differences in corpora, natural language interfaces, semantics, language contact, grammar development, computer-assisted language learning, information extraction and simulations of language learning. Over the last decade, he focused more on creating computational tools for analyzing pronunciation differences, contributing a number of techniques to dialectology. His contributions in dialectology have given rise to the so-called School of Groningen in that field. Nerbonne has served as associate editor of Computational Linguistics and has published there as well as in the international refereed journals Linguistische Berichte; Machine Translation; Linguistics; Linguistics and Philosophy; Künstliche Intelligenz; Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence; Journal of Logic, Language and Information; Traitement Automatique des Language, Language Variation and Change; Dialectologia et Geolinguistica; Taal en Tongval; Computers and the Humanties, and Lecture Notes in Computer Science.
Distinctions
Honorarprofessor at the Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg
Measuring Dialect Differences. With Wilbert Heeringa. In Jürgen Erich Schmidt and Peter Auer Language and Space: Theories and Methods. Berlin: Mouton De Gruyter, 2009, pp. 550–567.
Quantitative Social Dialectology: Explaining Linguistic Variation Geographically and Socially. With Martijn Wieling and Harald Baayen. PLoS ONE, 6, 2011: e23613.
Inducing a Measure of Phonetic Similarity from Pronunciation Variation. With Martijn Wieling and Eliza Margaretha. Journal of Phonetics. March 2012, pp. 307–314.