Editor for this issue: Lydia Grebenyova <lydia
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Saarland University is pleased to announce the availability of four doctoral scholarships within the recently established European Post-Graduate College "Language Technology and Cognitive Systems" Saarbruecken - Edinburgh starting in October 1st, 2001. Each scholarship will be funded for two years (extendable to three years). Doctoral degrees may be obtained in computational linguistics, phonetics, and informatics, from Saarland University. The European Post-Graduate College has been established in cooperation between Saarland University and the University of Edinburgh (Division of Informatics) - two leading institutions in the fields of computational linguistics, artificial intelligence and cognitive science who are collaborating in offering a joint post-graduate education programme. The cooperation includes * a six to twelve months research stay in Edinburgh * joint supervision of dissertations by lecturers from Saarbruecken and Edinburgh * an intensive research exchange programme between Saarbruecken and Edinburgh (including, for example, an annual two-week forum attended by college members and lecturers from both centres) The college focuses on the computational and cognitive foundations of human language processing, particularly emphasising the following research areas: * language understanding (including spoken language processing and psycholinguistic modelling) * inference and reasoning * knowledge representation, lexicon, and ontology * data-intensive language models (including corpus-based and statistical language modelling) * dialogue and language generation (computational and cognitive models) Lecturers in Saarbruecken are M. Pinkal, H. Uszkoreit (computational linguistics), W. Barry (phonetics), M. Crocker (psycholinguistics), M. Kohlhase, J. Siekmann, G. Smolka, W. Wahlster (informatics/AI). In Edinburgh, lecturers include M. Fourman, E. Klein, A. Lascarides, C. Mellish, J. Moore, J. Oberlander, M. Osborne, M. Pickering, M. Steedman, P. Taylor, B. Webber, and C. Williams. The scholarship provides up to DM 2,870 per month. Additional compensation includes family allowance (where applicable), travel funding, and an additional monthly allowance of approximately DM 1,410 for the stay in Edinburgh. Applicants should hold a strong university degree in one of the relevant areas, and they should not be more than 28 years of age. Female scientists and international students are particularly encouraged to apply. Applications should include 1. a curriculum vitae (including a list of publications, where possible) 2. a sample of written work (e.g. research paper, or dissertation, preferably in English) 3. copies of high school and university certificates 4. two references (to be sent directly to the college speaker) 5. an informal cover letter specifying interests, previous knowledge and activities in any of the relevant research areas. The letter should indicate the area in which the dissertation is to be conducted (computational linguistics/psycholinguistics, phonetics, or informatics/AI): where possible, it should include a brief outline of research interests to be pursued within the scholarship. Applications should be sent to the speaker of the college (see address below). Closing date for applications is May 31st, 2001. Prof. Dr. Matthew Crocker (Speaker) Department of Computational Linguistics Saarland University P.O. Box 15 11 50 D-66041 Saarbruecken Tel: +49 (0)681 302-6560 E-mail: egk-adminMail to author|Respond to list|Read more issues|LINGUIST home page|Top of issuecoli.uni-sb.de Fax: +49 (0)681 302-6561 Internet: http://www.coli.uni-sb.de/egk