Home Page of Francis Chantree

Room MX141,
Computing Department; The Open University
Walton Hall, Milton Keynes, MK7 6AA, United Kingdom
Tel (office):   +44 (0) 1908-659200
Tel (mobile): +44 (0) 7729 920057
Email:
[email protected]
My Website contains:
I live at the moment in Romania with my fiancee/wife. See here my initial impressions of this fascinating country: Romanian Adventure.
    Who Am I, and Why?
    My PhD
    Education & Employment
Hobbies
Other (Sillier) Stuff
Guestbook
Who Am I, and Why
I have  just completed a PhD at the Open University.
I am  now  44 years old. I put my eerily youthful appearance down to dance classes, strict  adherence to Francis and Avik's Patent Diet, and a rather naive  attitude towards life.
I was  born in Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire,  U.K., and I was brought up nearby in the picturesque village of  Abbots Langley, which nestles in the armpit of where the M25 meets the M1. I have also lived in London, Sheffield, Edinburgh and (joy of joys!)  Copenhagen.
I like  to think of myself as a bit of a linguist. One of my major achievements in life  has been to learn Danish, one of the more rubbish-sounding members of the family of  Germanic languages. If you want me to learn your stupid language, then make me  fall in love with you and take me back to live with you in your stupid country! (Joking)
I am a  Christian, and I attend the Water Eaton Church Centre.
My PhD
My  PhD was  entitled Identifying Nocuous Ambiguity in  Requirements Documents. "Nocuous" means liable to cause misunderstandings,  and "requirements" refers to the branch of engineering which deals with  specifying how systems and suchlike are to be built. Ambiguity is pervasive in human language, though not all of it is nocuous. My approach is to  find "innocuous"; ambiguities, i.e. those that are not likely to cause  misunderstandings, and then eliminate these. The user can seek clarification of  the meaning of the remaining nocuous ambiguities, and hopefully have them  rewritten. The innocuous ambiguities are found using a set of heuristics. These  are based on analysis of a large generic corpus, and together they aim to  automatically predict human judgements about which ambiguities are nocuous and  which are innocuous. We test our method on coordination ambiguities. These are  ambiguities found in phrases such as "old men and women will receive tax cuts",  where is it unclear whether "old" applies to both the men and the women or just  to the men. We have achieved precision approaching 90% when predicting the most  common type of innocuous ambiguity.
My supervisors were Anne De  Roeck, Bashar  Nuseibeh and Alistair Willis who help me and guide me.
My Publications
Francis Chantree: Ambiguity  Management in Natural Language Generation, CLUK 2004, Birmingham,  U.K., January  2004.
Francis Chantree, Adam  Kilgarriff, Anne de Roeck and Alistair Willis: Disambiguating  Coordinations Using Word Distribution Information, RANLP 2005, Borovets, Bulgaria, September 2005.
Francis Chantree, Alistair Willis, Adam  Kilgarriff, and Anne de Roeck: Detecting  Dangerous Coordination Ambiguities Using Word Distribution, (to appear in  Current Issues in Linguistic Theory: Recent Advances in Natural Language  Processing, published by John Benjamins).
Francis Chantree, Bashar Nuseibeh, Anne de Roeck and Alistair Willis: Identifying  Nocuous Ambiguities in Requirements Specifications; In Proceedings of 14th IEEE International  Requirements Engineering conference (RE'06) Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minnesota,  U.S.A., September 2006.
When I write others, be assured, gentle reader, you will be the first to know.
Education & Employment
A    fairly normal schooling with exams, baggy trousers, smoking behind the bike  sheds, etc, at Langleybury  School - long since closed down due to lack of interest - whose most famous  alumnus is probably Vinnie  Jones.
BSc (computing, maths and  Homeric studies) at the Good Old Open University from 1988-1997.
Msc  (artificial intelligence) at Edinburgh University 1998-1999.
I have worked  as a computer operator,  a computer programmer, and a technical writer. The last of these was with a  Danish company Digiquant-  who I cannot  recommend to you too highly - producing Internet billing software. Other less  vocational roles in which I have found myself have been strawberry picker,  cleaner, fast food operative, and cycle courier.
If  you think that you might want to offer me a job, click here first: Curriculum Vitae
Hobbies
I  have been mad for dance!  Dances from the  former Soviet countries with the Balalaika Dance Group, Laban dance with The Laban Guild,  Expressionist dance with Hilde Holger (the centenary of her birth is celebrated this year!), mime, and flamenco with the wonderful Elisabeth Morch in Copenhagen =>
I have also trained capoeira  (a Brazilian martial art) for several years with the also wonderful London School of Capoeira
Allow me to inflict my  musical tastes upon you:
Ukrainian Ska - a genre destined to be!  - Haydamaky, Perkalaba
From Leeds - but singing in  Ukrainian! - The Ukrainians
Hungarian Gypsy Bands - Ando Drom & Besh O Drom
Hungarian Cimbalom Wizard - Kalman Balogh
The choral and chamber music  of Czech composer Leos  Janacek
Still the best, the Queen of flamenco song - La Nina de los Pienes
The  High Priestess of just about everything else - Nina Simone
Super Spanish  Scumbags Mano Negra
Russian band, African sound, German name - Markscheider Kunst!
Romanian gypsy/ex-army-brass-band chancers - Mahala Rai Banda .
And what about literature?  Everybody likes a good book, so here are a few of my favourite authors,  pretentious middle-class ponce that I am:
Empathetic Sourthern  States American - Carson McCullers;
Exquisite Jesuit Poet - Gerard Manley Hopkins
Myopic Irish Ambiguiser - James Joyce
Nobel Prize  Winning West Indian Poet - Derek Walcott
French, Free-Fantasizing, Rough-Trade Recidivist - Jean Genet
Horny/Holy metaphysical mastercraftsman - John  Donne
Martyred Spanish playwright  and lyric poet - Federico Garcia Lorca
Bi-polar Bard of Bean Town - Robert Lowell
Other Stuff
You really should read about Ambiguity. Go on, you  know you want to!
Here  at the Open University we are often given valuable advice about how to go about  our PhD studies. However, I have spotted some gaps and hereby present my own Rules of PhD  Research.
I have  received some comments from some eminent people on drafts of the more long-term work that I have been writing. Click here for details.
After reading the adverts  in in-flight magazines, I've designed and launched my own range  of men's fragrances!
I've just come back from Romania.  Had a lovely time, it's a beautiful country. Click to read about my Romanian Adventure!
Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

1