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In a world of growing floods of information, humans need the
assistance of mechanized information processing tools. One important
source of information consists of written or spoken text.
The Institute for Natural Language Processing (IMS) carries out basic
and applied research and trains students to create tools for automated
processing of spoken and written language. In order to cover most of
the range of research issues in Natural Language Processing, the IMS
divides into the four sections (Chairs):
+ Computational Linguistics
+ Experimental Phonetics
+ Formal Logic and Philosophy of Language
+ Theoretical Computational Linguistics
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