Editor for this issue: <>
May I ask to help me to spread the news concerning the following publication, w hich might interest many people working in the field? P.M.Bertinetto, M.Kenstowicz &M.Loporcaro (eds), Certamen Phonologicum II, Tori no, Rosenberg & Sellier 1991. It contains the papers presented at the second Cortona Phonology Meeting, held in spring 1990. The book is organized in three sections, each containing 5 or 6 papers: General issues, Prosodic theory, Italian dialects and phonological the ory. Among the authors: H.Basboll, H.van der Hulst & C.Ewen, B.Hurch, D.Michael s, I.Vogel, L.Burzio, M.Kenstowicz, E.Selkirk, Th.Vennemann, N.Smith. Pier Marco Bertinetto Scuola Normale Superiore, PisaMail to author|Respond to list|Read more issues|LINGUIST home page|Top of issue
Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 5, No. 0497. Wednesday, 4 Dec 1991. CALL FOR PAPERS Computational Approaches to Non-Literal Language COMPUTATIONAL INTELLIGENCE Special Journal Issue August 1992 Not too late to send intention to submit Submissions are invited to a Special Issue of COMPUTATIONAL INTELLIGENCE Journal on Computational Approaches to Non-Literal Language. Guest editors are Dan Fass, James Martin and Elizabeth Hinkelman. Response to earlier calls for papers, asking people to notify of us of an intention to submit a paper, has been good. Intended papers cover a wide variety of topics related to processing non-literal language. There is a possibility that a research monograph may be published containing papers from the special issue. Please inform Dan Fass if you intend to submit a paper but have not yet done so, giving a tentative title and brief description of your intended paper. 1. Focus of the Special Issue Non-literal language includes metaphor, idiom, "indirect" speech acts, implicature, hyperbole, metonymy, irony, simile, sarcasm, and other devices whose meaning cannot be obtained by direct composition of their constituent words. Papers are invited on topics including (but not limited to) the computer recognition, interpretation, acquisition, generation, and robust parsing of non-literal language. Issues of interest include: o the relationship of non-literal to literal language, o the adequacy of various forms of knowledge representation (symbolic vs connectionist vs statistical), o static vs dynamic mechanisms, o general vs idiosyncratic treatment of instances, o instances as novel vs conventional forms, o comparison and contrast of models of the various forms of non-literal language, o broader implications for AI. 2. Impetus for the Special Issue The editors of the Special Issue recently organized a workshop on non-literal language at IJCAI-91. Attendees, besides the organizers, were John Barnden, Ted Briscoe, Jerry Hobbs, Eric van der Linden, Hiroshi Motoda, Yamagami Matsumoto, David Powers, Lisa Rau, Cameron Shelley, Raoul Smith, Susan Weber, Sylvia Weber Russell, and Janet Wiles. The 169 page workshop proceedings is available as technical report CU-CS-550-91 from the University of Colorado at Boulder. It costs $5 per copy (including postage). Please contact James Martin for further details. 3. Schedule for the Special Issue Date Stage Thurs Feb 6 1992 Submission deadline. Thurs Mar 19 1992 Reviews returned. Thurs Apr 23 1992 Revised, accepted papers received. 4. Manuscript Preparation and Review Typical submissions should be 25-50 pages in manuscript form, though exceptions may be made. The manuscript should be double spaced and typed on one side of the page only. Each page of the manuscript should be numbered, beginning with the title page. The title page should include the title, authors' names, institution of origin, and its address (including postal code). Please include telephone number(s) and e-mail address. An abstract should be not more than 200 words, and on a separate page. References should not be cited in the abstract. Please note that for an author's submission to be reviewed, the author must review three other submissions to the Special Issue. More detailed Instructions to Authors will be sent to those intending to submit a paper. 5. The Guest Editors Dan Fass James Martin Centre for Systems Science, Computer Science Department and Simon Fraser University, Institute of Cognitive Science, Burnaby, BC V5A 1S6, Canada. University of Colorado at Boulder, Tel: (604) 291-3208 Box 430, Boulder, CO 80309-0430, USA. Fax: (604) 291-4951 Tel: (303) 492-3552 E-mail: fassMail to author|Respond to list|Read more issues|LINGUIST home page|Top of issuecs.sfu.ca Fax: (303) 492-2844 E-mail: martin
boulder.colorado.edu Elizabeth Hinkelman Center for Information and Language Studies, University of Chicago, 1100 E. 57th Street, Chicago, IL 60637, USA. Tel: (312) 702-8887 Fax: (312) 702-0775 E-mail: eliz
tira.uchicago.edu