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Lexical Encoding of Implicit Information Date: 23-Feb-2005 - 25-Feb-2005 Location: Cologne, Germany Contact: Stefan Engelberg Contact Email: engelbMail to author|Respond to list|Read more issues|LINGUIST home page|Top of issueuni-wuppertal.de Meeting URL: http://www2.hu-berlin.de/angl/haertl/dgfs-ag/index.html Linguistic Sub-field: General Linguistics Call Deadline: 10-Aug-2004 Meeting Description: The purpose of the workshop is to present and discuss current work on the representation and processing of lexically encoded implicit information. The workshop will take place as part of the Annual Conference of the German Linguistics Society (http://www.dgfs.de/cgi-bin/koeln2005.pl) CALL FOR PAPERS Workshop Lexical Encoding of Implicit Information Organizers: Stefan Engelberg, Holden Haertl The primary objective of the workshop is to determine how linguistically unrealized information is anchored in the lexical entry of an expression by means of semantic and grammatical encoding. This kind of implicit information is contrasted with extra-linguistic conceptual reasoning, which is controlled by directives of encyclopedic knowledge. Thus, this workshop will contribute to the delimitation of linguistic structure from conceptual structure. A comparative, cross-linguistic perspective will help to differentiate grammatical parameters, universal principles, and those regularities which are associated with the knowledge systems of non-linguistic cognitive capacities. One central topic of the workshop will be the anchoring of implicit event participants in the argument structure of verbs. Here, different types of argument reductions as we find them with e.g. intransitivized, medial, and decausative verbs are of particular interest as well as the semantic and pragmatic conditions for argument structure adjustments. From a discourse perspective, we welcome contributions on the relation between lexical components of implicit information and elements identified in the discourse. For instance, we know that the degree of grammatical visibility of implicit event participants (e.g. in passives vs. decausatives) can be shown to be a discourse-related phenomenon. Closely related to this issue is the question of what the referential properties of implicit arguments (definiteness/indefiniteness) are. In addition to issues immediately pertaining to the representation of implicit arguments, talks are welcome which explore how certain types of inferences closely connected to implicit arguments are triggered. Here, the domain of lexically encoded causality, as is found with causative verbs, vs. implicit causality, as is found with psych-verbs, could be addressed as well as the influence of implicit arguments on the aspectual constitution of the expressions under consideration. Furthermore, the workshop welcomes contributions on implicit information from the areas of language processing and (neuro-) psychology of language. We invite researchers working in the fields of lexical semantics, syntax-semantic interface, valence theory, discourse representation theories, and psycholinguistics to contribute to the workshop. Presentations will be 20 minutes + 10 minutes for discussion. ABSTRACT SUBMISSION GUIDELINES Please submit a one-page abstract and include the following information: (a) Title of the paper (b) Name of the author (c) Affiliation (d) e-mail address Send your submissions to engelb
uni-wuppertal.de. DATES 10 August, 2004: deadline for abstracts 1 September, 2004: notification of acceptance 1 October, 2004: final program 23-25 February, 2005: workshop REGISTRATION INFORMATION Participants are expected to register for the conference of the German Linguistics Society. There will be a moderate fee.
This is to announce a new online archive of papers on Distributed Morphology, located at http://www.ai.mit.edu/projects/dm/archive/. *** CALL FOR POSTINGS *** We are issuing a call for new postings to the archive! If you have a paper relating to Distributed Morphology, please consider submitting it. Posting to the archive is easy -- just go to the above URL, click on "submit an entry", and follow the instructions. Anyone who submits a paper must ensure that copyright laws are respected; anything you submit can be removed later if it appears in print. Thanks to Andrew Nevins and Pranav Anand for developing this valuable resource. We hope it will be of use to the linguistics community at large! For more information on Distributed Morphology, please see Rolf Noyer's online FAQ List at http://www.ling.upenn.edu/~rnoyer/dm/ and the archives of the Distributed Morphology e-mail list, at http://listserv.linguistlist.org/archives/dm-list.html. Martha McGinnis DM-LIST ModeratorMail to author|Respond to list|Read more issues|LINGUIST home page|Top of issue