LINGUIST List 16.1832
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Thu Jun 09 2005
Calls: Computational Ling/Australia; Forensic Ling/France
Editor for this issue: Amy Wronkowicz
<amy 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. Menno
van Zaanen,
Australasian Language Technology Workshop
2. wagner
anne,
5th International Round Tables for the Semiotics of Law
Message 1: Australasian Language Technology Workshop
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Date: 07-Jun-2005
From: Menno van Zaanen <menno ics.mq.edu.au>
Subject: Australasian Language Technology Workshop
Full Title: Australasian Language Technology Workshop Short Title: ALTW Date: 10-Dec-2005 - 11-Dec-2005 Location: Sydney, NSW, Australia Contact Person: Menno van Zaanen Meeting Email: workshop alta.asn.au Web Site: http://www.alta.asn.au/events/altw2005/ Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics Call Deadline: 15-Sep-2005 Meeting Description: 2005 Australasian Language Technology Workshop (ALTW2005) First Call for Papers University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia 10 and 11 December 2005 Submissions due: 15 September 2005 http://www.alta.asn.au/events/altw2005 Workshop contact email: workshop alta.asn.au PURPOSE A two-day workshop on Natural Language Technology will be organised by the Australasian Language Technology Association (ALTA). This event will be the third annual installment of the workshop in its most-recent incarnation, and the continuation of an annual workshop series that has existed under various guises since the early 90s. It will be held in conjunction with a tutorial day, also at the University of Sydney, on 9 December, 2005. The goals of the workshop are: - to bring together the growing Language Technology (LT) community in Australia and New Zealand and encourage interactions; - to encourage interactions between this community and the international LT community - to foster interaction between academic and industrial researchers - to encourage dissemination of research results - to provide a forum for the discussion of new and ongoing research and projects - to provide an opportunity for the broader artificial intelligence community to become aware of local LT research - to increase visibility of LT research in Australia, New Zealand and overseas. An innovation in this year's Australasian Language Technology Workshop will be the introduction of poster presentations in addition to the regular talks, in order to encourage more interactive discussion of research-in-progress. In this vein, we encourage submissions from students describing their thesis work and any preliminary results. Note that both publication types will have the same status in the proceedings. PROGRAM COMMITTEE - Ash Asudeh (University of Canterbury) - Eric Atwell (Leeds University) - Timothy Baldwin (University of Melbourne) - Steven Bird (University of Melbourne) - James Curran (Sydney University) - Walter Daelemans (University of Antwerp) - Robert Dale (Macquarie University) - Dominique Estival (Defence Science and Technology Organisation) - Dan Flickinger (Stanford University) - Tanja Gaustad (Appen) - Graeme Hirst (University of Toronto) - Ben Hutchinson (University of Edinburgh) - Jong-bok Kim (Kyung Hee University) - Alistair Knott (University of Otago) - Valia Kordoni (University of Saarland) - Hang Li (Microsoft Research) - Diana McCarthy (University of Sussex) - Diego Molla (Macquarie University) - Ajeet Parhar (Telstra Research Laboratories) - Cécile Paris (CSIRO ICT Centre) - Jon Patrick (University of Sydney) - David Powers (Flinders University) - Tony Smith (Waikato University) - Nicola Stokes (NICTA Victoria) - Takaaki Tanaka (NTT Communication Science Laboratories) - Aline Villavicencio (University of Essex) - Menno van Zaanen (Macquarie University) - Simon Zwarts (Macquarie University) ORGANISERS - Timothy Baldwin (University of Melbourne - co-chair) - James Curran (University of Sydney - local organiser) - Menno van Zaanen (Macquarie University - co-chair) TOPICS We invite the submission of papers on original and unpublished research on all aspects of natural language processing, including, but not limited to: - speech understanding and generation - phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics, and discourse - interpreting and generating spoken and written language - linguistic, mathematical, and psychological models of language - language-oriented information extraction and retrieval - corpus-based and statistical language modelling - summarisation - machine translation and translation aids - natural language interfaces and dialogue systems - natural language and multimodal systems - message and narrative understanding systems - evaluations of language systems - computational lexicography We welcome submissions on any topic that is of interest to the LT community, and particularly encourage submissions that broaden the scope of our community through the consideration of practical LT applications and through multi-disciplinary research. SUBMISSION FORMAT Submissions should follow the two-column format of the ACL proceedings and should not exceed eight (8) pages, including references. We strongly recommend the use of ACL LaTeX style files or Microsoft Word Style files tailored for this year's conference. The style files and example documents are available as a tarball on the homepage. We reserve the right to reject submissions that do not conform to these styles including font and page size restrictions. The preferred submission format is PDF. If this introduces problems, please contact the organisers beforehand. If we cannot print your file by the submission date it will be rejected without being reviewed. Therefore you are encouraged to send an early version with the typographical complexity of your final intended version so that we can check it is printable. The workshop will adopt a ''single-blind'' refereeing process: the reviewers will be made aware of the identity of the authors of submitted papers, but the identity of the reviewers will not be revealed to the authors. As such, all papers should include the full authors' names and affiliations. Note that this diverges from the submission guidelines adopted for ACL conferences. IMPORTANT DATES - Paper submission: 15 September 2005 - Notification of acceptance: 15 October 2005 - Camera-ready copy: 1 November 2005 - Workshop: 10 - 11 December 2005 MORE INFORMATION A web page for ALTW2005 can be found on the ALTA web page: http://www.alta.asn.au/events/altw2005 You can contact the workshop organisers for further information: workshop alta.asn.au The Australasian Language Technology Workshop is being organised by ALTA, the Australasian Language Technology Association.
Message 2: 5th International Round Tables for the Semiotics of Law
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Date: 07-Jun-2005
From: wagner anne <valwagnerfr yahoo.com>
Subject: 5th International Round Tables for the Semiotics of Law
Full Title: 5th International Round Tables for the Semiotics of Law Short Title: IRSL2006 Date: 17-May-2006 - 20-May-2006 Location: Boulogne sur Mer, France Contact Person: Catherine Wadoux Meeting Email: IRSL2006 univ-littoral.fr Linguistic Field(s): Forensic Linguistics Call Deadline: 27-Feb-2006 Meeting Description: 5th INTERNATIONAL ROUND TABLES FOR THE SEMIOTICS OF LAW 17-20 May, 2006 Université du Littoral Côte d'Opale (France) OFFICIAL LANGUAGES: French and English Organised under the auspices of CERCLE, équipe VolTer (Vocabulaire, Lexique et Terminologie) and of LARJ (Laboratoire d'Analyse et de Recherche Juridiques) - Université du Littoral Côte d'Opale in collaboration with International Journal for the Semiotics of Law. Comité organisateur / Organising Committee Anne Wagner Senior Lecturer Université du Littoral Côte d'Opale France Dragan Milovanovic Professor Justice Studies Northeastern Illinois University U.S.A Wouter Werner Senior Lecturer Institute of Public International Law Utrecht University Pays-Bas Phillip Chong Ho Shon Assistant Professor Indiana State University Department of Criminology U.S.A Rick Mohr Senior Lecturer University of Wollongong Australia Bureau de la conférence / Conference Office : Catherine Wadoux et Monique Randon 34 Grande Rue B.P. 751 62321 Boulogne-sur-Mer Cedex Tél. : 03 21 99 43 00 Fax : 03 21 99 43 91 E-mail : IRSL2006 univ-littoral.fr THE URL SHOULD BE POSTED WITHIN 3 MONTHS Call for Papers LAW, TOLERANCE AND DIVERSITY The other's otherness (L'altérité de l'autre) ''Tolerance is respect, acceptance and appreciation of the rich diversity of our world's cultures, our forms of expression and ways of being human. It is fostered by knowledge, openness, communication, and freedom of thought, conscience and belief. Tolerance is harmony in difference.'' Unesco's Declaration of Principles on Tolerance Religious, cultural and ethnic diversity together with international, political, and economic integration bring issues of tolerance and diversity to the forefront; and raise important questions for the semiotic analysis of law. Recent events have shown that tolerance and diversity remain under threat despite the best efforts of the international community, which has attempted through international conventions, treaties and national statutes, to stem the march of intolerance. The 5th International Round Tables for the Semiotics of Law invites contributors to reflect on the growing importance of Tolerance and Diversity in our international community and why attacks upon it have become so prolific. Contributors may choose to explore semiotic, rhetorical, pragmatic, sociolinguistic, psychological, philosophical and/or visual perspectives on the Law, Tolerance and Diversity. Papers that examine the ways 'actors' in our society (legislators, politicians, activists, movie producers, singers, painters, graffiti artists, photographers etc.) have provoked public discourse to confront intolerance, racism, nationalism and anti-Semitism are particularly welcome. The Round Table will provide an opportunity for a general discussion of issues in the semiotics of law as well as open discussion to increase our knowledge about our ''other's otherness'' with respect to Law, Tolerance and Diversity. ABSTRACT REQUIREMENTS 1. Abstract should be no longer than 400 words. They can include references but should not contain a bibliography. 2. Abstracts should be sent in English or in French 3. Abstracts should contain : a - Title of the presentation b - Name(s) of the author(s) c - Affiliation of the author(s) d - Both e-mail and postal addresses. 4. Only abstracts meeting the above criteria will be considered. 5. Abstracts should be sent by e-mail to Anne WAGNER (valwagnerfr yahoo.com).
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