LINGUIST List 16.1750
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Fri Jun 03 2005
Calls: Socioling, Canada; Comp Ling, South Korea
Editor for this issue: Michael Appleby
<michael linguistlist.org>
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As a matter of policy, LINGUIST discourages the use of abbreviations or acronyms in conference announcements unless they are explained in the text. To post to LINGUIST, use our convenient web form at http://linguistlist.org/LL/posttolinguist.html.
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Directory
1. Peter
Wood,
Diaspora Experiences: German-Speaking Immigrants and their Descendants
2. Mark
Dras,
3rd International Workshop on Paraphrasing
Message 1: Diaspora Experiences: German-Speaking Immigrants and their Descendants
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Date: 01-Jun-2005
From: Peter Wood <wcgs uwaterloo.ca>
Subject: Diaspora Experiences: German-Speaking Immigrants and their Descendants
Full Title: Diaspora Experiences: German-Speaking Immigrants and their Descendants Date: 24-Aug-2006 - 27-Aug-2006 Location: Waterloo, Ontario, Canada Contact Person: Peter Wood Meeting Email: wcgs uwaterloo.ca Web Site: http://www.wcgs.ca Linguistic Field(s): Sociolinguistics Subject Language(s): German, Standard (GER) Call Deadline: 30-Sep-2005 Meeting Description: The conference will explore commonalities and differences experienced by German-speaking immigrants and their descendants when living in geographical and linguistic settings other than those of their own ethnic origin. These can include individuals and groups in all continents of the world. Sessions will be planned with a focus on history, linguistics, literature and film. Call for Expressions of Interest and Proposals Diaspora Experiences: German-Speaking Immigrants and their Descendants Waterloo Centre for German Studies University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada 24-27 August 2006 The Waterloo Centre for German Studies at the University of Waterloo invites expressions of interest and, subsequently, proposals for papers of thirty minutes length to be given in English (preferred) or German at an international interdisciplinary conference on the diaspora experiences of German-speaking immigrants and their descendants. The Kitchener-Waterloo region, home to the Waterloo Centre for German Studies and University of Waterloo, is Canada's most prominent area of German settlement. The conference will explore commonalities and differences experienced by German-speaking immigrants and their descendants when living in geographical and linguistic settings other than those of their own ethnic origin. These can include individuals and groups in all continents of the world. Sessions will be planned with a focus on history, linguistics, literature and film. Topics within these may include, among others: - acculturation strategies of German-speaking people (assimilation, integration, separation); - bilingualism, loss and maintenance of the German language among immigrants and their descendants; - emigration/immigration history; - emigration/immigration of German-speaking people as a subject of literature and film; - gender issues; - impact of WW I, WW II and the experience of Germany under National Socialist rule on German-speaking people in the diaspora; - interactions between German-speaking immigrants and their descendants, with others in their adopted countries, and among members of different waves of German-speaking immigrants; - relations between the German language and identity development. Potential participants are invited to address these issues within specific geographical contexts and/or as part of international and cross-cultural comparisons. To be considered, please send an initial brief (a sentence or two) expression of interest, with your rough topic by September 30, 2005. This will assist us in planning and budgeting. Follow this with a proposal of up to five hundred words without your name, and on separate sheets your name, address, professional affiliation and brief curriculum vitae. You may submit by e-mail attachment (preferred), fax or mail, to arrive in the organizers' hands not later than November 30, 2005. We will acknowledge receipt of expressions of interest and proposals quickly and inform you of the result by February 28, 2006. All proposals will be assessed anonymously by an international panel of expert scholars in the respective fields. Presenters will be required to submit the full text of their presentation to the conference committee by July 15, 2006. These will be posted on the conference website and be made available to conference registrants through the use of a password. Subsequently, selected papers will be included in the published conference volume. These contributions will need to fit the thematic framework described by the volume's editor. The volume will be in English. Contributions written in German and accepted will be translated in co-operation with their authors. All presenters will receive travel subsidies and will be expected to attend and participate actively in the full conference. The conference program is planned to include three keynote speakers of international reputation in the field and will offer opportunities to become acquainted with the region of Waterloo. It will be open to the public. Reply to: Diaspora Experiences Conference Committee Waterloo Centre for German Studies University of Waterloo 200 University Ave. West Waterloo ON N2L 3G1 Canada E-mail: wcgs uwaterloo.ca Fax: 519 746 5243 Phone: 519 888 4567, ext. 7547 www.wcgs.ca
Message 2: 3rd International Workshop on Paraphrasing
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Date: 01-Jun-2005
From: Mark Dras <madras ics.mq.edu.au>
Subject: 3rd International Workshop on Paraphrasing
Full Title: 3rd International Workshop on Paraphrasing Short Title: IWP2005 Date: 14-Oct-2005 - 14-Oct-2005 Location: Jeju Island, Korea, Republic of Contact Person: Mark Dras Meeting Email: iwp2005-submission nlp.nagaokaut.ac.jp Web Site: http://nlp.nagaokaut.ac.jp/IWP2005/ Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics Call Deadline: 06-Jun-2005 Meeting Description: The workshop will be open to any research topic related to paraphrasing of any language. More specifically, topics of interest include, but are not limited to: * typology of paraphrases * representation of paraphrases * automatic acquisition of paraphrases * algorithms for recognizing and generating paraphrases * existing and potential applications of automatic paraphrasing * computational modeling of linguistic theories on paraphrases * open resources for paraphrasing technology * methods for evaluating paraphrasing technology Call for Paper The 3rd International Workshop on Paraphrasing (IWP2005) http://nlp.nagaokaut.ac.jp/IWP2005/ IJCNLP-05 Workshop October 14, 2005 Jeju Island, South Korea Paper Submission Deadline: now June 6, noon (Japanese time) [Background and Goals] Paraphrases are alternative ways to convey the same information. As has been claimed by an increasing number of researchers, technology for generating and recognizing paraphrases can potentially benefit a broad range of NLP tasks including machine translation, reading assistance, multi-document summarization, information retrieval, and question answering. Motivated by this background, we organized international workshops on automatic paraphrasing in 2001 and 2003 (IWP2003), which successfully drew the growing interest of NLP researchers. As both workshops attracted attention and successfully finished, we will hold the third workshop in conjunction with IJCNLP-05, in order to collect existing and emerging research topics on automatic paraphrasing during the recent two years. The proposed workshop is intended to be the successor to these previous workshops. The goals of the workshop are to connect with a broader range of research activities related to automatic paraphrasing, and to place the workshops in a series with the aim of establishing a new research field. [General Topics] The workshop will be open to any research topic related to paraphrasing of any language. More specifically, topics of interest include, but are not limited to: -typology of paraphrases -representation of paraphrases -automatic acquisition of paraphrases -algorithms for recognizing and generating paraphrases -existing and potential applications of automatic paraphrasing -computational modeling of linguistic theories on paraphrases -open resources for paraphrasing technology -methods for evaluating paraphrasing technology Given the location of the workshop, papers focusing on paraphrasing within the languages of the Asia-Pacific region are particularly encouraged. [Special Topic: constructing paraphrase-related resources] The theme of the previous workshop in the series was the automated acquisition of paraphrase. A particular topic of interest for this workshop, then, is the issue of constructing paraphrase-related resources that would follow from this automated acquisition: What should these look like? How would dictionaries and corpora of automatically acquired paraphrases be defined? [Submission Information] Paper submissions must be anonymous and are limited to at most 8 pages including references, figures etc. Authors are required to follow the guidelines of IJCNLP-05 workshop style, by hopefully using either the LaTeX style file or the MS Word document template shown in the IJCNLP-05 style file page (http://www.afnlp.org/IJCNLP05/archives4.html). Only electronic submissions will be accepted. Please email your submission in PDF (preferred), PostScript, or MS Word to the following address: iwp2005-submission nlp.nagaokaut.ac.jp Each submission should also specify the author's name, affiliation, postal address, email address and title in the body of the email message. For more information, please make contact with the workshop co-chairs by using the same e-mail address above. [Important Dates] Paper submission deadline: now June 6, noon (Japanese time) Notification of acceptance: July 18, 2005 Camera ready manuscripts due: August 5, 2005 Workshop date: October 14, 2005 [Workshop Organizers] Mark Dras, Macquarie University, Australia Kazuhide Yamamoto, Nagaoka University of Technology, Japan Please use the following e-mail address to contact us: iwp2005-submission nlp.nagaokaut.ac.jp [Program Committee] -Caroline Brun (Xerox Research Centre Europe, France) -Mark Dras (co-chair, Macquarie University, Australia) -Ulf Hermjakob (USC Information Sciences Institute, USA) -Kentaro Inui (NAIST, Japan) -Gen'ichiro Kikui (ATR-SLT, Japan) -Mirella Lapata (University of Edinburgh, UK) -Hiroshi Nakagawa (University of Tokyo, Japan) -Fabio Rinaldi (University of Zurich, Switzerland) -Satoshi Sato (Kyoto University, Japan) -Yusuke Shinyama (New York University, USA) -Noriko Tomuro (DePaul University, USA) -Hua Wu (Toshiba China, P.R.China) -Kazuhide Yamamoto (co-chair, Nagaoka University of Technology, Japan) -Chengqing Zong (Chinese Academy of Sciences, P.R.China)
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