Academic Conferences
Grateful to have presented and participated at international conferences, workshops, and research events.
I am a computational social scientist working at the intersection of psychology and natural language processing, developing theory-driven methods to study how socially meaningful concepts change over time and across domains. My research uses historical text corpora, contextual embeddings, and large language models to examine conceptual and lexical semantic change, with a particular focus on the changing representations of mental health-related concepts. I co-developed SIBling, a framework for modelling semantic change across the dimensions of Sentiment, Intensity, and Breadth, and LSC-Eval, a benchmarking framework for evaluating methods for detecting lexical semantic change using synthetic historical data. More broadly, I am interested in conceptual change, language change and variation, mental health discourse, and computational approaches to societally significant questions. I am active in the NLP community through workshop organisation, shared tasks, and program committee service, and also contribute through peer review in psychology and computational social science.
PhD, Psychology/ Natural Language Processing
University of Melbourne (2023-)
Graduate Diploma in Psychology (Advanced) with Honours
University of Melbourne
Broadly, my research uses computational methods to study how socially meaningful concepts change over time, and how those shifts reflect wider cultural and societal dynamics. At the intersection of psychology, linguistics, and natural language processing, I develop theory-driven approaches for tracing conceptual change in historical text corpora using contextual embeddings, large language models, lexical resources, and statistical modelling. My current work focuses especially on mental health-related concepts and how their meanings and representations shift across scientific, media, and everyday language. This research program develops new ways of modelling conceptual change, evaluating computational methods, and applying them to important societal and cultural questions across languages, domains and disciplines.
Key Contributions:
Grateful to have presented and participated at international conferences, workshops, and research events.
Honoured to have been selected to attend the Google Research @ Sydney Event at the first Google research facility in Australia.
New sense-tracking pipeline for estimating the prevalence of word senses in historical text corpora: link
Delighted to share my PhD research at (1) the Change is Key! conference in Gothenburg (Sweden), (2) University of Utrecht (Netherlands), (3) National Research Council Canada, (4) the Mental Health PhD Program Conference!, and (5) The LChange'26 Workshop, colocated with EACL.
5 Aug – 30 Sept 2025 — Interned at Change is Key!. The program develops computational tools to trace how language, society, and culture evolve, applying NLP and corpus methods to study semantic change and variation across linguistics, digital humanities, and the social sciences.
Corpus data and scripts publicly available — see Resources tab.