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Graduiertenkolleg "Linguistische Grundlagen fuer die Sprachverarbeitung" "Linguistic Foundations of Language Processing" Institut fuer Linguistik - Universitaet Stuttgart Postfach 10 60 37, 70049 Stuttgart, 0711/121 3139 (5. Stock, Keplerstrasse 17, 70174 Stuttgart) Announcing a workshop on ****************************************************** * Language Change and Generative Syntax * * * * University of Stuttgart, December 16 - 17, 1994 * ****************************************************** Speakers will include: Werner Abraham (Groningen) Susan Clack (Bangor) Kees van Dijk (Amsterdam) Josep Fontana (Ohio State) Jack Hoeksema (Groningen) Georg Kaiser (Hamburg) Silvia Luraghi (Rome) Cecilia Poletto (Padua) Ian Roberts (Bangor) Richard Schrodt (Vienna) Alessandra Tomaselli (Teramo) Richard Waltereit (Berlin) Fred Weerman (Utrecht) The final program will be announced soon. For further information, please contact: Gisella Ferraresi & Julia Philippi Institut fuer Linguistik/Germanistik Universitaet Stuttgart Postfach 10 60 37 D-70049 Stuttgart Germany E-mail: juliaMail to author|Respond to list|Read more issues|LINGUIST home page|Top of issueims.uni-stuttgart.de
EACL-95 REMINDER AND CALL FOR PAPERS 7th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics March 27--31, 1995 University College Dublin Belfield, Dublin, Ireland Topics of Interest: Papers are invited on substantial, original, and unpublished research on all aspects of computational linguistics, including, but not limited to, pragmatics, discourse, semantics, syntax, and the lexicon; phonetics, phonology, and morphology; interpreting and generating spoken and written language; linguistic, mathematical, and psychological models of language; language-oriented information retrieval; corpus-based language modeling; machine translation and translation aids; natural language interfaces and dialogue systems; message and narrative understanding systems; and theoretical and applications papers of every kind. Requirements: Papers should describe unique work; they should emphasize completed work rather than intended work; and they should indicate clearly the state of completion of the reported results. A paper accepted for presentation at the EACL Meeting cannot be presented or have been presented at any other meeting with publicly available published proceedings. Papers that are being submitted to other conferences must reflect this fact on the title page. Format for Submission: Authors should submit preliminary versions of their papers, not to exceed 3200 words (exclusive of references). Papers outside the specified length and formatting requirements are subject to rejection without review. Papers should be headed by a title page containing the paper title, a short (5 line) summary and a specification of the subject area. Since reviewing will be "blind", the title page of the paper should omit author names and addresses. Furthermore, self-references that reveal the authors' identity (e.g., "We previously showed (Smith, 1991) ...") should be avoided. Instead, use references like "Smith previously showed (1991) ..." Care should be taken to mask identity in the bibliography by referring to the author's own papers as anonymous. This is especially applicable of unpublished in-house technical reports which are certain to reveal the identity of the author(s). To identify each paper, a separate identification page should be supplied, containing the paper's title, the name(s) of the author(s), complete addresses, a short (5 line) summary, a word count, and a specification of the topic areas. Submission Media: Papers should be submitted electronically or in hard copy to the Program Co-chairs: Steven Abney and Erhard W. Hinrichs Universitaet Tuebingen Seminar fuer Sprachwissenschaft Abt. Computerlinguistik Kleine Wilhelmstr. 113 D-72074 Tuebingen, Germany email: eacl95Mail to author|Respond to list|Read more issues|LINGUIST home page|Top of issuesfs.nphil.uni-tuebingen.de Electronic submissions should be either self-contained LaTeX source or plain text. LaTeX submissions must use the ACL submission style (aclsub.sty) retrievable from the ACL LISTSERV server (access to which is described below) and should not refer to any external files or styles except for the standard styles for TeX 3.14 and LaTeX 2.09. A model submission modelsub.tex is also provided in the archive, as well as a bibliography style acl.bst. (Note however that the bibliography for a submission cannot be submitted as separate .bib file; the actual bibliography entries must be inserted in the submitted LaTeX source file.) Hard copy submissions should consist of four (4) copies of the paper and one (1) copy of the identification page. For both kinds of submissions, if at all possible, a plain text version of the identification page should be sent separately by electronic mail, using the following format: title: < title > author: < name of first author > address: < address of first author > ... author: < name of last author > address: < address of last author > abstract: < abstract > content areas: first area >, ... ,< last area > word count: Schedule: Authors must submit their papers by October 20, 1994. Papers received after this date will not be considered. Notification of receipt will be mailed to the first author (or designated author) soon after receipt. Authors will be notified of acceptance by December 23rd 1994. Camera-ready copies of final papers prepared in a double-column format, preferably using a laser printer, must be received by 31 January 1995, along with a signed copyright release statement. The ACL LaTeX proceedings format is available through the ACL LISTSERV. The paper sessions, including student papers, will take place on March 29-31. Student Sessions: There will again be special Student Sessions organized by a committee of (E)ACL graduate student members. (E)ACL student members are invited to submit short papers in any of the topics listed above. The papers will be reviewed by a committee of students and faculty members for presentation in workshop-style sessions and publication in a special section of the conference proceedings. There will be a separate call for papers, available from the ACL LISTSERV or from the chair of the program committee for the student sessions: Thorsten Brants, Universit"at des Saarlandes, Computerlinguistik, D-66041 Saarbr"ucken, Germany, email: thorsten
coli.uni-sb.de. Other Activities: The meeting will include a program of tutorials coordinated by John Nerbonne, Alfa-informatica, Oude Kijk in 't Jatstraat 26, Postbus 716, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, NL-9700 AS Groningen; email: nerbonne
let.rug.nl. Proposals for tutorials may be sent to him. There is no special form. Tutorials are scheduled for March 27-28; registration for tutorials will take place on March 26. Some of the ACL Special Interest Groups may arrange workshops or other activities. Further information may be available from the ACL LISTSERV. Conference Information: The Local Arrangements Committee is chaired by: Allan Ramsay, Department of Computer Science, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland (phone: (353)-1-7062479, FAX: (353)-1-2687262, email: allan
monkey.ucd.ie) ACL Information: For other information on the ACL more generally, contact Judith Klavans (global) or Mike Rosner (for Europe): Judith Klavans, Columbia University, Computer Science, Room 724, New York, NY 10027, USA; phone: +1-212-939-7120, fax: +1-914-478-1802; email:acl
cs.columbia.edu; Michael Rosner, IDSIA, Corso Elvezia 36, CH-6900 Lugano, Switzerland, email: mike
idsia.ch. General information about the ACL AND electronic membership and order forms are available from the ACL LISTSERV. Information on the ACL is also available through www URL http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~acl/home.html ACL Listserv: LISTSERV is a facility to allow access to an electronic document archive by electronic mail. The ACL LISTSERV has been set up at Columbia University's Department of Computer Science. Requests from the archive should be sent as e-mail messages to listserver
cs.columbia.edu with an empty subject field and the message body containing the request command. The most useful requests are "help" for general help on using LISTSERV, "index acl-l" for the current contents of the ACL archive and "get acl-l <file>" to get a particular file named <file> from the archive. For example, to get an ACL membership form, a message with the following body should be sent: get acl-l membership-form.txt Answers to requests are returned by e-mail. Since the server may have many requests for different archives to process, requests are queued up and may take a while (say, overnight) to be fulfilled. The ACL archive can also be accessed by anonymous FTP. Here is an example of how to get the same file by FTP (user type-in is in bold): $ ftp ftp.cs.columbia.edu Name (cs.columbia.edu:pereira): anonymous Password: pereira
research.att.com << not echoed ftp > cd acl-l/Information ftp > get 94.membership.form.Z ftp > quit $ uncompress 94membership.form.Z EACL-95 STUDENT SESSION CALL FOR PAPERS 7th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics March 27--31, 1995 University College Dublin Belfield, Dublin, Ireland PURPOSE: The goal of this session is to provide a forum for students and PhD-students to present work in progress and receive feedback from other members of the computational linguistics community. The session will be workshop-style, consisting of short paper presentations by student authors; students and senior researchers who are not presenting are invited to participate in the discussion. A committee of students will organize the session, review submitted papers and decide on acceptance. The accepted papers will be published in a special section of the conference proceedings. TOPICS OF INTEREST: Papers are invited on research on all aspects of computational linguistics, including, but not limited to, pragmatics, discourse, semantics, syntax, and the lexicon; phonetics, phonology, and morphology; interpreting and generating spoken and written language; linguistic, mathematical, and psychological models of language; language-oriented information retrieval; corpus-based language modeling; machine translation and translation aids; natural language interfaces and dialogue systems; message and narrative understanding systems; and theoretical and applications papers of every kind. REQUIREMENTS: Papers should describe original, unpublished work in progress that demonstrates insight, creativity, and promise. Papers submitted to the main conference will not be considered for the student session. Students may of course submit DIFFERENT papers to both. Note that having a student session for the presentation of ongoing work in no way influences the treatment of student-written papers submitted to the main conference. Rather, the student session will provide an entirely separate track emphasizing students' "work in progress" rather than completed work. FORMAT FOR SUBMISSION: Preference is given to e-mail submission. Student authors should submit papers limited to 3 pages (including references, figures, and appendices), with typeface no smaller than 10pt. LaTeX, Postscript and plain ASCII formats are acceptable. LaTeX submissions must be self-contained LaTeX source and should not refer to any external files or styles except for the standard styles for TeX 3.14 and LaTeX 2.09. An extra identification page should be sent SEPERATELY by electronic mail, containing the title, author(s), address(es) and topic area(s). Hard copy submissions should be made only if no e-mail access is available. Papers outside the specified length and formatting requirements are subject to rejection without review. Those submissions which are accepted will be published in a special section of the EACL conference proceedings. Papers should be submitted to: Thorsten Brants Universitaet des Saarlandes Computerlinguistik, Geb. 17 Postfach 1150 D-66041 Saarbruecken, Germany phone: +49 / 681 / 302-4682 FAX: +49 / 681 / 302-4700 email: eaclstud
coli.uni-sb.de STUDENT SESSION INFORMATION: If you have questions about the student session, contact Thorsten Brants by e-mail, phone, FAX or post (cf. above). SCHEDULE: Authors must SUBMIT THEIR PAPERS BY OCTOBER 20, 1994. Papers received after this date will not be considered. Notification of receipt will be mailed to the first author (or designated author) soon after receipt. Authors will be NOTIFIED OF ACCEPTANCE BY DECEMBER 23 1994. Camera-ready copies of final papers prepared in a double-column format, preferably using a laser printer, must be RECEIVED BY 31 JANUARY 1995, along with a signed copyright release statement. The ACL LaTeX proceedings format is available through the ACL LISTSERV. The paper presentations will take place on MARCH 29-31. MAIN CONFERENCE INFORMATION: For information on the main conference contact the Program Co-Chairs: or the Local Arrangements Chair: Steven Abney and Erhard W. Hinrichs Allan Ramsay Universitaet Tuebingen Department of Computer Science Seminar fuer Sprachwissenschaft University College Dublin Abt. Computerlinguistik Belfield, Dublin 4 Kleine Wilhelmstr. 113 Ireland D-72074 Tuebingen, phone: (353)-1-7062479 Germany FAX: (353)-1-2687262 email: eacl95
sfs.nphil.uni-tuebingen.de email: allan
monkey.ucd.ie ACL LISTSERV: LISTSERV is a facility to allow access to an electronic document archive by electronic mail. The ACL LISTSERV has been set up at Columbia University's Department of Computer Science. Requests from the archive should be sent as e-mail messages to listserver
cs.columbia.edu with an empty subject field and the message body containing the request command. The most useful requests are "help" for general help on using LISTSERV, "index acl-l" for the current contents of the ACL archive and "get acl-l <file>" to get a particular file named <file> from the archive. For example, to get an ACL membership form, a message with the following body should be sent: get acl-l membership-form.txt Answers to requests are returned by e-mail. Since the server may have many requests for different archives to process, requests are queued up and may take a while (say, overnight) to be fulfilled. The ACL archive can also be accessed by anonymous FTP. Here is an example of how to get the same file by FTP: $ ftp ftp.cs.columbia.edu Name (cs.columbia.edu:pereira): anonymous Password: pereira
research.att.com << not echoed ftp > cd acl-l/Information ftp > get 94.membership.form.Z ftp > quit $ uncompress 94membership.form.Z