LINGUIST List 20.152
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Sun Jan 18 2009
Calls: Historical Ling,Syntax/Brazil; Computational Ling/Singapore
Editor for this issue: Kate Wu
<kate linguistlist.org>
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LINGUIST is pleased to announce the launch of an exciting new feature: Easy Abstracts! Easy Abs is a free abstract submission and review facility designed to help conference organizers and reviewers accept and process abstracts online. Just go to: http://www.linguistlist.org/confcustom, and begin your conference customization process today! With Easy Abstracts, submission and review will be as easy as 1-2-3!
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Directory
1. Ruth
Lopes,
11th Diachronic Generative Syntax Conference
2. Tracy
King,
Workshop on Grammar Engineering Across Frameworks
Message 1: 11th Diachronic Generative Syntax Conference
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Date: 16-Jan-2009
From: Ruth Lopes <digs11 iel.unicamp.br>
Subject: 11th Diachronic Generative Syntax Conference
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Full Title: 11th Diachronic Generative Syntax Conference Short Title: DIGS11 Date: 22-Jul-2009 - 24-Jul-2009 Location: Campinas, São Paulo, Brazil Contact Person: Charlotte Galves Meeting Email: digs11 iel.unicamp.br Web Site: http://www.unicamp.br/~digs11 Linguistic Field(s): Historical Linguistics; Syntax Call Deadline: 31-Jan-2009 Meeting Description: 11th Diachronic Generative Syntax Conference Second Call for Papers Although all the topics on formal historical syntax are welcome, the 11th edition of DiGS encourages papers that approach topics related to the understanding and modeling of how (morpho) syntax change comes about in languages, or groups of languages, including but not restricted to: - parameter theory, - the role of language acquisition and contact on language change, - the dynamics of syntactic change - grammaticalization, - language reconstruction. Confirmed Plenary Speakers: Ana Maria Martins (University of Lisbon) Giuseppe Longobardi (University of Trieste) Ian Roberts (University of Oxford) Jürgen Meisel (University of Hamburg / University of Calgary) Mary Aizawa Kato (University of Campinas) We invite abstracts for a 30-minute presentation followed by a 10-minute discussion period. Abstracts should be anonymous and no longer than two pages, including references and examples, with margins of at least 1 inch, Times New Roman 12, single-spaced. Submissions are limited to a maximum of one individual and one joint abstract per author. Authors are requested to send an e-mail message to digs11 iel.unicamp.br, with two copies of their abstract attached (in pdf format); one of them anonymous. Please include the title of the paper, the author's name, affiliation and e-mail address in the body of the submission email. Subject should be "submission". The deadline for submission is Saturday, January 31, 2009. Notification of acceptance will be made by March 15, 2009. Posters: There will also be a poster session, for which we invite papers of an empirically-driven nature or in a squib-like format when dealing with theoretical issues. The same guidelines for submission apply. Please, indicate clearly in your submission email whether your abstract should be considered for presentation or for the poster session. DIGS11 Organizing Committee: Charlotte Galves Filomena Sandalo Juanito Avelar Ruth Lopes Sônia Cyrino
Message 2: Workshop on Grammar Engineering Across Frameworks
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Date: 15-Jan-2009
From: Tracy King <tracyhollowayking gmail.com>
Subject: Workshop on Grammar Engineering Across Frameworks
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Full Title: Workshop on Grammar Engineering Across Frameworks Short Title: GEAF09 Date: 06-Aug-2009 - 06-Aug-2009 Location: Singapore, Singapore Contact Person: Tracy King Meeting Email: Tracy.King microsoft [dot] com Web Site: http://www-csli.stanford.edu/~thking/GEAF09/ Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics Call Deadline: 01-May-2009 Meeting Description: Workshop on Grammar Engineering Across Frameworks - Geaf 2009 on August 6 at the ACL/IJCNLP 2009 Conference, Singapore http://www-csli.stanford.edu/~thking/GEAF09/ Call for Papers Workshop Topics This workshop aims to bring together grammar engineers from different frameworks to compare research and methodologies, particularly around the themes of evaluation, modularity, maintainability, relevance to theoretical and computational linguistics, and applications of "deep" grammars to real-world domains and NLP tasks. Recent years have seen the development of techniques and resources to support robust, deep grammatical analysis of natural language in real-world domains and applications. The demands of these types of tasks have resulted in significant advances in areas such as parser efficiency, hybrid statistical/symbolic approaches to disambiguation, and the acquisition of large-scale lexicons. The effective acquisition, development, maintenance and enhancement of grammars is a central issue in such efforts, and the size and complexity of realistic grammars makes these tasks extremely challenging; indeed, these tasks are often tackled in ways that have much in common with software engineering. This workshop aims to bring together grammar engineers from different frameworks --- for example LFG, HPSG, TAG, CCG, dependency grammar --- to compare their research and methodologies. The workshop will solicit submissions for papers on the following themes: 1. Evaluation: Proposals concerning evaluation methodologies and metrics which can capture the added benefits of deep linguistic analysis; evaluation techniques which can compare grammars across varieties/languages; 2. Modularity: Reflections on which aspects of linguistic structure can most easily be separated out from each other, why and how the analyses of separate linguistic phenomena are interconnected/interdependent, and the role of frameworks in promoting or inhibiting modularity; 3. Maintainability: Techniques for improving long-term and multi-developer maintainability of grammars; impacts of considerations of maintainability on choices of linguistic analysis; 4. Relevance to theoretical and computational linguistics: Reflections on how to present grammar engineering work to other research communities; 5. Regression testing: Evaluation for internal purposes; methodologies and techniques for test suite construction, role of test suites in day-to-day progress on grammars. 6. Multilingualism: Approaches, techniques and tools improving development and maintainability of grammars for multiple system languages. Important Dates Paper submission deadline: 1 May, 2009 Notification of acceptance of papers: 1 June, 2009 Camera-ready copy of papers due: 7 June, 2009 Demo session requests due: 8 May, 2009 ACL-IJCNLP 2009 Workshops: Aug 6, 2009 Paper Submission All papers must be submitted via the START system at: https://www.softconf.com/acl-ijcnlp09/GEAF/submit.html Style files for submission are available at: http://www.acl-ijcnlp-2009.org/main/authors/stylefiles/ Submissions are 8 pages with one extra page for references. Please submit pdf (not Word). Demo session requests will not be published in the proceedings, but will be listed in the program. The requests should contain a one page description of the demo. Programme Committee - Emily Bender, Washington - Miriam Butt, Konstanz - John Carroll, Sussex - Stephen Clark, Oxford - Ann Copestake, Cambridge - Berthold Crysmann, Bonn - Mary Dalrymple, Oxford - Stefanie Dipper, Bochum - Dan Flickinger, Stanford - Josef van Genabith, Dublin - Julia Hockenmaier, Illinois - Ron Kaplan, Powerset - Montserrat Marimon, Barcelona - Yusuke Miyao, Tokyo - Jun'ichi Tsujii, Tokyo / Manchester Organizers and Contacts for Inquiries - Tracy Holloway King, Microsoft / Powerset: Tracy.King microsoft .com - Marianne Santaholma, Geneva University: marianne.santaholma unige.ch Proceedings Accepted papers will form part of the workshop proceeedings and will be available on the conference CD+hard copy.
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