Geoffrey Sampson (born 1944) is Professor of Natural Language Computing in the Department of Informatics, University of Sussex.[1]
He produces annotation standards for compiling corpora (databases) of ordinary usage of the English language.[1] His work has been applied in automatic language-understanding software, and in writing-skills training.[1] He has also analysed Ronald Coase's "theory of the firm" and the economic and political implications of e-business.[1]
Sampson is politically active and was elected to Wealden District Council in 2001, serving until 2002 with the local Conservative Party branch. He resigned this position after he was criticised by Labour Party and Liberal Democrat ministers and councillors for publishing on his website an article, There's Nothing Wrong With Racism (Except the Name), containing a number of racist claims. The outcome was subsequently endorsed by Conservative Central Office as "in the best interests of all concerned ...the Conservative party is opposed to all forms of racial discrimination".[4] Some time later he left the Conservative Party and in 2006 joined the United Kingdom Independence Party.[5]
"A test of the leaf-ancestor metric for parse accuracy" Natural Language Engineering9 (2003): xx–xx. [with Anna Babarczy]
"Definitional, personal, and mechanical constraints on part of speech annotation performance". Natural Language Engineering12 (2006): xx–xx. [with Anna Babarczy and John Carroll (not John M Carroll)]