LINGUIST List 19.1814
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Fri Jun 06 2008
Calls: Computational Linguistics/USA; General Linguistics/USA
Editor for this issue: F. Okki Kurniawan
<okki linguistlist.org>
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Directory
1. Philip
McCarthy,
Florida AI Research Conference
2. Gabriela
Caballero,
Berkeley Workshop on Affix Ordering
Message 1: Florida AI Research Conference
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Date: 05-Jun-2008
From: Philip McCarthy <pmccarthy mail.psyc.memphis.edu>
Subject: Florida AI Research Conference
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Full Title: Florida AI Research Conference Short Title: FLAIRS Date: 19-May-2009 - 21-May-2009 Location: Sanibel Island, USA Contact Person: Philip McCarthy Meeting Email: pmccarthy mail.psyc.memphis.edu Web Site: http://www.flairs-22.info/ Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics Subject Language(s): English (eng) Call Deadline: 29-Jun-2008 Meeting Description: The 22nd International Florida Artificial Intelligence Research Society Conference (FLAIRS-22) will be held 19th-21st May 2009 at the Sundial Beach and Golf Resort, on Sanibel Island, Florida, USA. FLAIRS-22 will feature technical papers, special tracks, and invited speakers. Call for Papers We are inviting proposals for special tracks for The 22nd International Florida Artificial Intelligence Research Society Conference (FLAIRS-22). FLAIRS will be held 19th-21st May 2009 at the Sundial Beach and Golf Resort, on Sanibel Island, Florida, USA. The FLAIRS special tracks are held in parallel with the general conference. A special track consists of a group of papers in a sub-discipline of artificial intelligence. Special tracks are published in the conference proceedings, and the tracks run in parallel with the general conference. Special tracks provide researchers in focused areas the opportunity to meet and present their work, and offer a forum for interaction among the broader community of artificial intelligence researchers. Topics of interest are in all areas of artificial intelligence. Sanibel is a barrier island lying on the Gulf coast of Florida, near Fort Myers. Although an island in name, Sanibel is linked to the mainland by a causeway and a bridge. Sanibel boasts beautiful beaches and is also home to numerous alligators and even the occasional crocodile. Importantly, Sanibel also features numerous distractions for researchers eager to discuss collaborations, methods, directions, and approaches; for details, visit http://www.sanibelisland.com/recreation.html . The FLAIRS special tracks are held in parallel with the general conference. A special track consists of a group of papers in a sub-discipline of artificial intelligence. Special tracks are an integral part of each FLAIRS conference: their papers are required to meet the same standards and are published in the conference proceedings, and the tracks run in parallel with the general conference. Special tracks provide researchers in focused areas the opportunity to meet and present their work, and offer a forum for interaction among the broader community of artificial intelligence researchers. Submission of proposals for special tracks at the conference is now invited. Topics of interest are in all areas of artificial intelligence. Last year's FLAIRS featured special tracks such as Applied Natural Language Processing, Artificial Intelligence Education, and Intelligent Tutoring Systems. Special track chairs may submit papers to their own tracks. Those papers will be reviewed by two members of the special track's program committee and two members of the general conference program committee. The decision of acceptance will be made by the conference program co-chairs. Accepted papers will be published and presented as part of the special track. Proposal Instructions Proposals must be submitted to the EasyChair conference system ( http://www.easychair.org/conferences?conf=flairs22). They must include the following information: - Title of the special track. - The track's organizational structure. How many submissions do you expect to receive and how many papers do you plan to have? A track may have up to 4 sessions, with 3 papers per session. Special tracks that fail to attract sufficient papers will be merged into the general conference. - Names and contact information for yourself and your track's program committee, who have all agreed to serve on the committee. You should have enough members for each paper to be reviewed by 4 reviewers. - Promotional plans and materials, including a draft call for papers, specific plans for publicizing the special track, and the names of any speakers you are considering inviting. (FLAIRS cannot guarantee any form of financial support for special track invited speakers at this stage.) - Summary of any special tracks you have organized for FLAIRS over the last two years. In particular, what track(s) have you organized, how many submissions were received, and how many papers were accepted? Acceptance of proposals includes: quality of proposal; potential for success of the track, including the perceived level of interest to the AI community and the appropriateness of the organizing committee; and whether the track was held at prior FLAIRS conferences. For more details, contact Phil McCarthy (pmccarthy[ ]mail.psyc.memphis.edu). Dates and Deadlines: Proposals for special tracks: 29th June 2008 Notification of acceptance of special tracks: 10th July 2008 Submission of papers: 23rd November 2008 Notification of acceptance: 25th January 2009 Camera ready versions due: 25th February 2009 FLAIRS-22 is hosted by the Florida Artificial Intelligence Research Society, in cooperation with the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence.
Message 2: Berkeley Workshop on Affix Ordering
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Date: 03-Jun-2008
From: Gabriela Caballero <gcaballe berkeley.edu>
Subject: Berkeley Workshop on Affix Ordering
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Full Title: Berkeley Workshop on Affix Ordering Date: 04-Oct-2008 - 04-Oct-2008 Location: Berkeley, California, USA Contact Person: Gabriela Caballero Meeting Email: affix berkeley.edu Web Site: http://linguistics.berkeley.edu/~bwao/Berkeley%20Workshop%20on%20Affix%20Ordering%20%3A%20Call.html Linguistic Field(s): General Linguistics Call Deadline: 01-Aug-2008 Meeting Description: A workshop on the complexity of affix ordering in specific languages/language families, empirical challenges for current theories, and unified explanations for the range of cross-linguistic affix ordering patterns attested to date. Call for Papers The Department of Linguistics at the University of California, Berkeley and the Department of Linguistics at the University of Toronto invite abstracts for submission to a workshop on the theme of ''Affix Ordering'', to be held at the University of California, Berkeley on October 4th, 2008. We are pleased to announce that the workshop will include presentations by Sharon Inkelas (UC Berkeley) and Keren Rice (University of Toronto). The recent literature contains diverse proposals as to what principles underlie the surface linear arrangement of morphemes in a word (e.g., semantic factors, syntactic scope, psycholinguistic processing-based factors, prosodic factors, morphophonological subcategorization frames, and morphological templates), not all of which are mutually exclusive, but whose precise nature and possibilities for interaction remain to be worked out. The study of affix ordering thus forms an ideal testing ground for theories of morphology and its interfaces with other components of the grammar. Even as documentation of lesser studied languages brings to light new patterns that challenge previous assumptions about possible affix ordering systems (e.g. free, variable prefix ordering in Chintang), closer study of languages previously considered arbitrary and templatic has revealed patterns of a more universal semantic or syntactic nature (e.g. Athabaskan). This workshop aims at facilitating collaboration between theorists, language specialists, typologists, and anyone interested in the study of affix order. We invite papers from any perspective which explore the complexity of affix ordering in specific languages, present empirical challenges for current theories, and/or seek unified explanations for the range of cross-linguistic affix ordering patterns attested to date. Papers presenting original data from lesser studied languages are particularly encouraged. Some possible questions include, but are by no means limited to, the following: What are the limits (if any) of semantics, syntax, and phonology in determining affix order? How do these limits manifest themselves universally and/or in specific languages? In cases where multiple factors interact in the determination of affix order, what is the nature of this interaction? Templates have often been used as a descriptive rather than formal mechanism. But to the extent that some affix ordering systems are genuinely templatic, what is the nature of the internal structure of morphological templates? Are there cross-linguistic constraints on these structures? Are some types of affix ordering patterns characteristic of certain kinds of morphological systems (e.g. inflectional, agglutinating, polysynthetic)? What aspects of affix ordering are to be modeled synchronically in the grammar, versus determined by grammar-external forces (e.g. processing, language change)? Abstracts (pdf files only) must be sent as attachments to: affix berkeley.edu In your email please include: title of paper, your full name, and affiliation. Submission deadline: August 1st, 2008 Notification of acceptance: August 15, 2008 Supported by The Doreen B. Townsend Center for the Humanities Organizers: Gabriela Caballero (UC Berkeley), Yuni Kim (UC Berkeley), and Tanya Slavin (U Toronto)
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