Wilks was educated at
Torquay Boys' Grammar School, followed by
Pembroke College, Cambridge, where he read Philosophy, joined the
Epiphany Philosophers and obtained his Doctor of Philosophy degree (1968) under Professor
R. B. Braithwaite for the thesis 'Argument and Proof'; he was an early pioneer in meaning-based approaches to the understanding of natural language content by computers. His main early contribution in the 1970s was called "Preference Semantics" (Wilks, 1973; Wilks and Fass, 1992), an algorithmic method for assigning the "most coherent" interpretation to a sentence in terms of having the maximum number of internal preferences of its parts (normally verbs or adjectives) satisfied. That early work was hand-coded with semantic entries (of the order of some hundreds) as was normal at the time, but since then has led to the empirical determinations of preferences (chiefly of English verbs) in the 1980s and 1990s. A key component of the notion of preference in semantics was that the interpretation of an utterance is not a well- or ill-formed notion, as was argued in
Chomskyan approaches, such as those of
Jerry Fodor and
Jerrold Katz. It was rather that a semantic interpretation was the best available, even though some preferences might not be satisfied. So, in "The machine answered the question with a low whine" the agent of "answer" does not satisfy that verb's preference for a human answerer—which would cause it to be deemed ill-formed by Fodor and Katz—but is accepted as sub-optimal or metaphorical, and, now, conventional. The function of the algorithm is not to determine well-formedness at all but to make the optimal selection of word-senses to participate in the overall interpretation. Thus, in "The Pole answered..." the system will always select the human sense of the agent and not the inanimate one if it gives a more coherent interpretation overall. Preference Semantics is thus some of the earliest computational work—with programs run at Systems Development Corporation in Santa Monica in 1967 in
LISP on an IBM360—in the now established field of
word sense disambiguation. This approach was used in the first operational
machine translation system based principally on meaning structures and built by Wilks at
Stanford Artificial Intelligence Laboratory in the early 1970s (Wilks, 1973) at the same time and place as
Roger Schank was applying his "Conceptual Dependency" approach to machine translation. The LISP code of Wilks' system was in
The Computer Museum, Boston. Wilks was elected a fellow of the American and European Associations for Artificial Intelligence, of the
British Computer Society, a member of the UK Computing Research Committee, and a permanent member of ICCL, the
International Committee on Computational Linguistics. He was professor of
artificial intelligence at the
University of Sheffield and a senior research fellow at the
Oxford Internet Institute. In 1991 he received a Defense Advanced Projects Agency grant on interlingual pragmatics-based machine translation and in 1994 he received a grant by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council to investigate in the field of large-scale information extraction (LaSIE); in the following years he would obtain more grants to carry on exploring the field of information extraction (AVENTINUS, ECRAN, PASTA...). In the 1990s Wilks also became interested in modelling human-computer dialogue and the team led by
David Levy and him as chief researcher won the
Loebner Prize in 1997. He was the founding director of the EU funded
Companions Project on creating long-term computer companions for people. At his
Festschrift in 2007 at the
British Computer Society in London a volume of his own papers was presented along with a volume of essays in his honour. He was awarded the Antonio Zampolli prize in honour of his lifetime work at the
LREC 2008 conference on 28 May 2008, and the Lifetime Achievement Award at the
ACL 2008 conference on 18 June 2008. In 2009, he was awarded the
British Computer Society's
Lovelace Medal, its annual award for research achievement, and was awarded the Fellowship of the
Association for Computing Machinery. In 1998, Wilks became head of the Department of Computer Science of the University of Sheffield, where he had started working in the year 1993 as professor of artificial intelligence, a post he still held. In 1993 he became the founding director of the Institute of Language, Speech and Hearing (ILASH). Wilks also set up the Natural Language Processing Group of the University of Sheffield. In 1994 he (along with Rob Gaizauskas and Hamish Cunningham) designed
GATE, an advanced NLP architecture that has been widely distributed.
National Life Stories conducted an oral history interview (C1672/24) with Yorick Wilks in 2016 for its Science and Religion collection held by the British Library. Wilks died on 14 April 2023, at the age of 83. ==Awards==