LINGUIST List 18.1375
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Mon May 07 2007
Calls: Computational Ling/Germany; General Ling/Germany
Editor for this issue: Ania Kubisz
<ania linguistlist.org>
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Directory
1. Thomas
Hanneforth,
Finite-State Methods and Natural Language Processing
2. Uli
Sauerland,
Experimental Pragmatics 2007
Message 1: Finite-State Methods and Natural Language Processing
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Date: 06-May-2007
From: Thomas Hanneforth <tom ling.uni-potsdam.de>
Subject: Finite-State Methods and Natural Language Processing
Full Title: Finite-State Methods and Natural Language Processing Short Title: FSMNLP 2007 Date: 14-Sep-2007 - 16-Sep-2007 Location: Potsdam, Germany Contact Person: Thomas Hanneforth Meeting Email: fsmnlp2007 ling.uni-potsdam.de Web Site: http://www.ling.uni-potsdam.de/fsmnlp2007 Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics Call Deadline: 03-Jun-2007 Meeting Description The aim of the FSMNLP 2007 is to bring together members of the academic, research, and industrial community working on finite-state based models in language technology, computational linguistics, linguistics and cognitive science or on related theory or methods in fields such as computer science and mathematics. The workshop will be a forum for researchers working - on NLP applications, - on the theoretical and implementation aspects, or - on their combination. Finite-State Methods and Natural Language Processing - FSMNLP 2007 Second Call for Papers Sixth International Workshop University of Potsdam, Germany 14-16 September 2007 http://www.ling.uni-potsdam.de/fsmnlp2007 mailto://fsmnlp2007 ling.uni-potsdam.de Papers due: 3 June 2007 We invite novel high-quality papers that are related to the themes including but not limited to: 1. NLP applications and linguistic aspects of finite-state methods The topic includes but is not restricted to: - speech, sign language, phonology, hyphenation, prosody - scripts, text normalization, segmentation, tokenization, indexing - morphology, stemming, lemmatisation, information retrieval, spelling correction - syntax, POS tagging, partial parsing, disambiguation, information extraction - machine translation, translation memories, glossing, dialect adaptation - annotated corpora and treebanks, semi-automatic annotation, error mining, searching 2. Finite-state models of language With this more focused topic (inside 1) we invite papers on aspects that motivate sufficiency of finite-state methods or their subsets for capturing various requirements of natural language processing. The topic includes but is not restricted to: - performance, linguistic applicability, finite-state hypotheses - Zipf's law and coverage, model checking against finite corpora - regular approximations under parameterized complexity, limitations and definitions of relevant complexities such as ambiguity, recursion, crossings, rule applications, constraint violations, reduplication, exponents, discontinuity, path-width, and induction depth - similarity inferences, dissimilation, segmental length, counter-freeness, asynchronous machines - garden-path sentences, deterministic parsing, expected parses, Markov chains - incremental parsing, uncertainty, reliability/variance in stochastic parsing, linear sequential machines 3. Practices for building lexical transducers for the world's languages. The topic accounts for usability of finite-state methods in NLP. It includes but is not restricted to: - required user training and consultation, learning curve of non-specialists - questionnaires, discovery methods, adaptive computer-aided glossing and interlinearization - example-based grammars, semi-automatic learning, user-driven learning (see topic 6 too) - low literacy level and restricted availability of training data, writing systems/phonology under development, new non-Roman scripts, endangered languages - linguist's workbenches, stealth-to-wealth parser development - experiences of using existing tools (e.g. TWOL) for computational morphology and phonology 4. Specification and implementation of sets, relations and multiplicities in NLP using finite automata The topic includes but is not restricted to: - regular rule formalisms, grammar systems, expressions, operations, closure properties, complexities - algorithms for compilation, approximation, manipulation, optimization, and lazy evaluation of finite machines - finite string and tree automata, transducers, morphisms and bimorphisms - weights, registers, multiple tapes, alphabets, state covers and partitions, representations - locality, constraint propagation, star-free languages, data vs. query complexity - logical specification, MSO(SLR, matches), FO(Str,<), LTL, generalized restriction, local grammars 5. Constraint-based grammars and k-ary regular relations With this more focused topic (inside 4) we invite researchers from related fields (computational linguists, mathematicians and computer scientists) into discussion that is motivated by constraint-based, declarative approaches to morphology/phonology and computational problems related to them. For example, regular relations in general are not closed under intersection, but restricted use of intersection of relations have proven useful in computational phonology and morphology, and their implementations such as KIMMO, PC-KIMMO, TWOLC, SEMHE, AMAR, WFSC, etc. In the future, new useful approaches and implementations may come up. The approaches may also propagate to other application areas in natural language processing, including finite-state syntax and query languages for parallel annotations in linguistic corpora. The topic includes but is not restricted to: - multi-tape automata, same-length relations and partition-based morphology, Semitic morphology - autosegmental phonology, shuffle, trajectories, synchronization, segmental anchoring, alignment constraints, syllable structure, partial-order reductions - problems related to auto-intersection of multi-tape automata e.g. marked Post Correspondence Problem - varieties of regular languages and relations, descriptive complexity of finite-state based grammars - automaton-based approaches to declarative constraint grammars, constraints in optimality theory - parallel corpus annotations, register automata, acyclic timed automata 6. Machine learning of finite-state models of natural language This topic includes but is not restricted to: - learning regular rule systems, learning topologies of finite automata and transducers - parameter estimation and smoothing, lexical openness - computer-driven grammar writing, user-driven grammar learning, discovery procedures - data scarcity, realistic variations of Gold's model, learnability and cognitive science - incompletely specified finite-state networks - model-theoretic grammars, gradient well/ill-formedness 7. Finite-state manipulation software (with relevance to the above themes) This topic includes but is not restricted to - regular expression pre-compilers such as regexopt, xfst2fsa, standards and interfaces for finite-state based software components, conversion tools - tools such as LEXC, Lextools, Intex, XFST, FSM, GRM, WFSC, FIRE Engine, FADD, FSA/UTR, SRILM, FIRE Station and Grail - free or almost free software such as MIT FST, Carmel, RWTH FSA, FSA Utilities, FSM<2.0>, Unitex, OpenFIRE, Vaucanson, SFST, PCKIMMO, MONA, Hopskip, ASTL, UCFSM, HaLeX, SML, and WFST - results obtainable with such exploration tools as automata, Autographe, Amore, and TESTAS - visualization tools such as Graphviz and Vaucanson-G - language-specific resources and descriptions, freely available benchmarking resources The descriptions of the topics above are not meant to be complete, and should extend to cover all traditional FSMNLP topics. Submitted papers or abstracts may fall in several categories.
Message 2: Experimental Pragmatics 2007
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Date: 05-May-2007
From: Uli Sauerland <uli alum.mit.edu>
Subject: Experimental Pragmatics 2007
Full Title: Experimental Pragmatics 2007 Short Title: XPRAG 2007 Date: 13-Dec-2007 - 16-Dec-2007 Location: Berlin, Germany Contact Person: Uli Sauerland Meeting Email: xprag zas.gwz-berlin.de Web Site: http://www.zas.gwz-berlin.de/xprag Linguistic Field(s): General Linguistics Call Deadline: 31-Aug-2007 Meeting Description: Human communication has always been a focus not only of linguistics, but also experimental psychology. While traditional linguistic research based on speakers' judgments will always be the fastest and most reliable way to develop a general theory of the adult speaker, formal experimental research makes two important contributions to linguistic theory: (i) populations other than competent adults can be investigated and (ii) differentiated measurements can be taken of competent adults and others. Therefore, linguistic and formal experimental research are not separable, also in the area of semantics and pragmatics. But only in recent years, a critical mass of researchers with deep theoretical knowledge and access to experimental methods has emerged such that one can speak of a field of Experimental Pragmatics. The field has grown and will continue to grow because of the development and refinement of experimental methods and new techniques based on technological advances. This conference serves to keep researchers in the field abreast of current research and to provide an overview of the field to linguists and psychologists not actively involved yet. Experimental Pragmatics 2007 is a sequel to three very successful, independently organized meetings in 2001 in Lyon, 2003 in Milan, and 2005 in Cambridge (UK). However, it differs from these meetings by addressing more topics and connecting also to results in semantics. The earlier successful meetings focused mostly on implicatures in acquisition and polarity. The planned topics at this meeting are: types, negation, implicatures and the semantics-pragmatics boundary. The conference is planned around four three-hour sessions for each of the four topics just mentioned. Each session will consist of two invited one-hour lectures and a subsequent one-hour discussion on the topic. The discussion will be introduced by an invited commentary of between 20 and 30 minute length and then the discussion will be open to all participants. In addition to the four thematic sessions, the conference will feature a eight submitted presentations each 20 min plus 10 min for discussion long, and a large number of poster presentations. The submitted talks and poster presentations are selected on the basis of a double-blind abstract evaluation process involving the invited speakers. The reviewers take into account scientific quality of the abstract (primary) and special interest for the four themes of the conference (secondary). Invited speakers by thematic session: Evening lecture on language and cognition: Ted Gibson (MIT) Types: Martin Hackl (Pomona), Liina Pylkkanen (NYU), comments: Bart Geurts (Nijmegen) Negation: Barbara Kaup (TU Berlin), Andrea Gualmini (Utrecht), comments: Ira Noveck (ICS Lyon) Implicatures: Napoleon Katsos (Cambridge), Julie Sedivy (Brown), comments: Ted Gibson (MIT) Semantics-pragmatics boundary: Reinhard Blutner (Amsterdam), tba., comments: Richard Breheny (UCL) Important Dates: August 31st, 2007 Abstract Submission Deadline Abstracts should be one-page plus an additional page for examples, graphs, tables, and references. We're planning to use an electronic abstract submission system and will announce the submission details in a second call. September 29th, 2007 Abstract review process complete December 13th, 6 pm: Evening lecture by Ted Gibson (MIT) on language and cognition location: Berlin, Germany, Schuetzenstr. 18, new building of ZAS (near Checkpoint Charlie) December 14-16th, 2007: Main Conference, 9 a.m. till 6:30 pm location: Berlin, Germany, Unter den Linden 6, main building of Humboldt University Organizers: Uli Sauerland (ZAS, Berlin), Anton Benz (ZAS, Berlin), Manfred Krifka (Humboldt University and ZAS, Berlin), Kazuko Yatsushiro (Humboldt University, Berlin) Conference Sponsors: German Research Council DFG (Main Conference Sponsor); ZAS; Humboldt University; European Union FP6, project CHLaSC (Evening Lecture on December 13th)
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