2nd call for papers: Ambiguity in Anaphora, Aug 2006, Málaga, Spain Ron Artstein <artstein@essex.ac.uk> wrote on 01/30/2006 04:50:49 AM:
> ---------- Forwarded message ---------- > > Subject: CfP: Ambiguity in Anaphora > > > > Ambiguity in Anaphora: Second Call for Papers > > http://cswww.essex.ac.uk/anaphora/ > > 7-11 August 2006, Málaga, Spain. > > A workshop held as part of ESSLLI 2006, the Eighteenth European Summer > School in Logic, Language and Information. > > Deadline for receipt of five-page extended abstracts: 8 March 2006 > Address for submission: anaphora@essex.ac.uk > > Organizers > > Ron Artstein, Massimo Poesio (University of Essex) > > Description > > We invite extended abstracts for 45-minute presentations (including > discussion) relating to ambiguity in anaphora. Anaphoric expressions > such as pronouns and definite descriptions can be ambiguous: they may > relate to more than one antecedent, or (potentially) denote more than > one referent. Such ambiguity poses challenges to the representation > of anaphoric relations in grammar and discourse and to computational > algorithms which resolve anaphoric reference, all of which should > allow for representing ambiguity. > > The workshop aims to create a dialogue between researchers who work on > anaphoric ambiguity from a variety of perspectives, such as: > > * Theoretical studies of the representation of ambiguous anaphoric > relations in syntax and semantics; > * Discourse models which represent referential ambiguity; > * Computational studies on the annotation and resolution of > anaphoric ambiguity; > * Psychological studies on the interpretation of ambiguous anaphoric > expressions; > * Studies of anaphoric expressions and anaphora antecedents which > are not noun phrases. > > We especially welcome studies that cross disciplinary boundaries and > look at anaphoric ambiguity from multiple viewpoints. > > Submission > > Deadline for receipt of extended abstracts: 8 March 2006 > Address for submission: anaphora@essex.ac.uk > > Extended abstracts should conform to the following guidelines. > > * Maximum five (5) pages, including data/tables/figures/references. > * Anonymous; do not identify the author via self-reference. > * First paragraph should be a brief summary of the entire work. > * A4 or letter size paper, 12 point font, 2.5 cm / 1 inch margins. > * PDF file format, with all fonts embedded. > > Submit your extended abstracts as email attachments. In the body > of the message include the paper title and the authors' names and > affiliations, as well as the email address for the corresponding > author. > > Address for submission: anaphora@essex.ac.uk > > Review > > Submissions will be reviewed by an international committee of > theoretical linguists, computational linguists and psycholinguists. > > Jennifer Arnold, University of North Carolina > Chris Barker, University of California, San Diego > Kees van Deemter, University of Aberdeen > Paul Elbourne, University of Manchester > Ruth Filik, University of Glasgow > Alan Garnham, University of Sussex > Klaus von Heusinger, University of Stuttgart > Véronique Hoste, University of Antwerp > Christer Johansson, University of Bergen > Elsi Kaiser, University of Southern California > Ruslan Mitkov, University of Wolverhampton > Christoph Müller, EML Research > Rebecca Passonneau, Columbia University > Tanya Reinhart, Tel Aviv University > Tony Sanford, University of Glasgow > Patrick Sturt, University of Edinburgh > Bonnie Webber, University of Edinburgh > > Selection will be strictly by quality, and there are no quotas based > on discipline; we hope to get a mix of papers from a variety of > viewpoints. > > Proceedings > > Final versions of the accepted papers, slightly longer than the > extended abstracts, will be distributed in a summer school reader. > If there is sufficient interest among the contributors, we intend > to approach a journal for publication as a special issue. > > Workshop format > > The workshop is part of ESSLLI and attendance is open to all ESSLLI > participants. It will consist of five sessions of 90 minutes each, > held over five consecutive days in the second week of ESSLLI. Each > session will consist of two 45-minute presentations (including time > for questions and discussion). > > Registration > > All workshop contributors will be required to register for ESSLLI > 2006. The registration fee for authors presenting a paper will > correspond to the early student registration fee. > > A number of additional fee-waiver grants might be made available > by the ESSLLI local organizing committee on a competitive basis > and workshop participants are eligible to apply for those. > > There will be no reimbursement for travel costs or accommodation. > Workshop speakers who have difficulty in finding funding should > contact the ESSLLI local organizing committee to ask for the > possibilities of a grant. > > Important Dates > > 8 March, 2006: Deadline for receipt of extended abstracts > 21 April, 2006: Notification of acceptance > 1 May, 2006: Final version due for the proceedings > 7-11 August, 2006: Workshop > > Further information > > Inquiries: anaphora@essex.ac.uk > > Workshop web site: http://cswww.essex.ac.uk/anaphora/ > > ESSLLI 2006 web site: http://esslli2006.lcc.uma.es/ > > The organizers are involved in the Arrau project (Anaphora Resolution > and Underspecification): http://cswww.essex.ac.uk/Research/nle/arrau/
_______________________________________________ 19th Annual CUNY Conference on Human Sentence Processing Conference email: sentproc@gc.cuny.edu Conference website: http://qcpages.qc.edu/~efernand/CUNY2006 |