Ari Holtzman

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Ari Holtzman is a professor of Computer Science at the University of Chicago and an expert in the area of Natural language processing and Computational linguistics.[1] Previously, Holtzman was a PhD student at the University of Washington where he was advised by Luke Zettlemoyer.

In 2017, he was a member of the winning team for the inaugural Alexa Prize for developing a conversational AI system for the Amazon Alexa device.[2] Holtzman has made multiple contributions in the area of text generation and language models such as the introduction of nucleus sampling in 2019, his work on AI safety and neural fake news detection, and the fine-tuning of quantized large language models.[3][4]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Ari Holtzman". UChicago Faculty. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
  2. ^ Langston, Jennifer. "UW students win Amazon's inaugural Alexa Prize for most engaging socialbot". UW News. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
  3. ^ Ray, Tiernan. "To Catch a Fake: Machine learning sniffs out its own machine-written propaganda". zdnet. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
  4. ^ Dettmers, Tim; Pagnoni, Artidoro; Holtzman, Ari; Zettlemoyer, Luke (2023-05-01). "QLoRA: Efficient Finetuning of Quantized LLMs". arXiv:2305.14314 [cs.LG].