LINGUIST List 18.296
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Fri Jan 26 2007
Calls: Phonology/UK; Comp Ling,Hist Ling,Phonology/Czech Republic
Editor for this issue: Ania Kubisz
<ania linguistlist.org>
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Directory
1. Patrick
Honeybone,
15th Manchester Phonology Meeting
2. John
Nerbonne,
Computing and Historical Phonology: 9th SIGMORPHON Meeting
Message 1: 15th Manchester Phonology Meeting
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Date: 25-Jan-2007
From: Patrick Honeybone <patrick.honeybone ed.ac.uk>
Subject: 15th Manchester Phonology Meeting
Full Title: 15th Manchester Phonology Meeting Short Title: 15mfm Date: 24-May-2007 - 26-May-2007 Location: Manchester, United Kingdom Contact Person: Patrick Honeybone Meeting Email: patrick.honeybone ed.ac.uk Web Site: http://www.englang.ed.ac.uk/mfm/15mfm.html Linguistic Field(s): Phonology Call Deadline: 01-Mar-2007 Meeting Description: Special session: 'Where is allomorphy?', featuring (in alphabetical order) Ricardo Bermudez-Otero, Mirjam Ernestus, John McCarthy, Glyne Piggott Held in Manchester, UK; organised through a collaboration of phonologists at the University of Edinburgh, the University of Manchester, the Universite Toulouse-Le Mirail, the Universite Montpellier-Paul Valery and elsewhere. We are pleased to announce our 15th Manchester Phonology Meeting (15mfm). The mfm is the UK's annual phonology conference, with an international set of organisers; it is held in late May every year in Manchester. The meeting has become a key conference for phonologists from all corners of the world, where anyone who declares themselves to be interested in phonology can submit an abstract on anything phonological in any phonological framework. In an informal atmosphere, we discuss a wide range of topics, including the phonological description of a wide variety of languages, issues in phonological theory, aspects of phonological acquisition and implications of phonological change. Special Session There is no conference theme - abstracts can be submitted on anything, but, following the success of such sessions in previous years, a special themed session has been organised, entitled 'Where is allomorphy?' This will feature invited speakers and conclude in an open discussion session when contributions from the audience will be very welcome. Abstracts which attempt to deal overtly with the issues involved with this (from any perspective) are certainly welcome. Special Session Speakers (in alphabetical order) - Ricardo Bermudez-Otero (University of Manchester) - Mirjam Ernestus (Radboud Univeristy & Max Planck Institute, Nijmegen) - John McCarthy (University of Massachusetts) - Glyne Piggott (McGill University) Abstract Submission This is a summary - please consult the website for full details www.englang.ed.ac.uk/mfm/15mfm.html - There is no obligatory conference theme - abstracts can be submitted on anything. Abstracts should be sent to Patrick Honeybone as attachments to an email (patrick.honeybone ed.ac.uk) by 1st March 2007. - Abstracts should be no longer than one side of A4, with 2.5cm or one inch margins, single-spaced, with a font size no smaller than 12, and with normal character spacing. - Please send two copies of your abstract - one of these should be anonymous and one should include your name, affiliation and email address at the top of the page, directly below the title. All abstracts will be reviewed anonymously by members of the organising committee and advisory board. - Please use one of these formats for your abstract: pdf, Word, or plain text. If you need to use a phonetic font in your abstract, either embed it in a pdf file, or use the Doulos SIL font. - Full papers will last around 25 minutes with around 5 minutes for questions, and there will be a high-profile poster session lasting one and a half hours. Please indicate whether you would prefer to present your work as an oral paper or a poster, or whether you would be prepared to present it in either form. - If you need technical equipment for your talk, please say so in the message accompanying your abstract and we will do our best to provide it, although this cannot be guaranteed. - We aim to finalise the programme, and to contact abstract-senders by around 31st March. Further important details concerning abstract submission are available on the conference website - please make sure that you consult these before submitting an abstract: www.englang.ed.ac.uk/mfm/15mfm.html Organisers Organising Committee The first named is the convenor and main organiser - if you would like to attend or if you have any queries about the conference, please feel free to get in touch with me (patrick.honeybone ed.ac.uk, or phone +44 (0)131 651 1838). - Patrick Honeybone (Edinburgh) - Ricardo Bermudez-Otero (Manchester) - Philip Carr (Montpellier-Paul Valery) - Jacques Durand (Toulouse-Le Mirail) Advisory Board - Jill Beckman (Iowa) - Bert Botma (Leiden) - Mike Davenport (Durham) - Daniel L. Everett (Illinois State) - Paul Foulkes (York) - S.J. Hannahs (Newcastle upon Tyne) - John Harris (UCL) - Kristine A. Hildebrandt (Manchester) - Martin Krämer (Tromso) - Aditi Lahiri (Konstanz) - Ken Lodge (UEA) - Marc van Oostendorp (Meertens Instituut) - Glyne Piggott (McGill) - Curt Rice (Tromso) - Catherine O. Ringen (Iowa) - Tobias Scheer (Nice) - James M. Scobbie (QMUC) - Dan Silverman (McGill) - Moira Yip (UCL)
Message 2: Computing and Historical Phonology: 9th SIGMORPHON Meeting
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Date: 25-Jan-2007
From: John Nerbonne <j.nerbonne rug.nl>
Subject: Computing and Historical Phonology: 9th SIGMORPHON Meeting
Full Title: Computing and Historical Phonology: 9th SIGMORPHON Meeting Short Title: CompHistPhon Date: 28-Jun-2007 - 28-Jun-2007 Location: Prague, Czech Republic Contact Person: John Nerbonne Meeting Email: j.nerbonne rug.nl Web Site: http://www.let.rug.nl/alfa/Prague/ Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics; Historical Linguistics; Phonology Call Deadline: 26-Mar-2007 Meeting Description: This workshop of the ACL Special Interest Group on Computational Morphology and Phonology will feature especially work on computing in service of historical phonology. The vision is to systematize William Jones's (1786) criterion that 'strong affinities' that could not be 'accident', and give it algorithmic form. We deliberately define the scope of the workshop broadly to include problems such as identifying spelling variants in older manuscripts, searching for cognates, hypothesizing and confirming sound changes and/or sound correspondences, modeling likely sound changes, the relation between synchronic social and geographic variation to historical change, the detection of phonetic signals of relatedness among potentially related languages, phylogenetic reconstruction based on sound correspondences among languages, dating historical changes, or others. We are emphatically open to papers applying techniques from other areas to problems in historical phonology such as applying work on confusable product names to the modeling of likely sound correspondences or the application of phylogenetic analysis from evolutionary biology to the problem of phonological reconstruction. The workshop will be open to all areas of computation applied to morphology and phonology. Papers will be on substantial, original, and unpublished research on any aspect of computational phonology and computational morphology. But we wish to focus on papers on historical phonology. Brett Kessler, Washington University, St. Louis, will deliver the keynote on word similarity metrics and multilateral comparison. See http://www.let.rug.nl/alfa/Prague for details on 8-pp. abstracts including formatting instructions.
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