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<DIV>Dear all,</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>I forgot to add the website address for the Call for Papers MAD05:</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV><A href="http://www.ling.uni-potsdam.de/~mad05" target=_BLANK><FONT
face=Courier size=4>http://www.ling.uni-potsdam.de/~mad05</FONT></A></DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>Kind regards,</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>Luuk Lagerwerf</DIV>
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<DIV><FONT size=2>-----Oorspronkelijk bericht----- <BR><B>Van:</B> Luuk
Lagerwerf <BR><B>Verzonden:</B> do 10-2-2005 16:16 <BR><B>Aan:</B>
CORPORA@UIB.NO; funknet@rice.edu; DISCOURS@LISTSERV.LINGUISTLIST.ORG
<BR><B>CC:</B> <BR><B>Onderwerp:</B> Call for Papers MAD05: Salience in
Discourse<BR><BR></FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=4><FONT face="Courier, Courier New"><SPAN
style="FONT-SIZE: 13px">Apologies for multiple
postings,</SPAN></FONT></FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=4><FONT face="Courier, Courier New"><SPAN
style="FONT-SIZE: 13px"></SPAN></FONT></FONT> </DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=4><FONT face="Courier, Courier New"><SPAN
style="FONT-SIZE: 13px"></SPAN></FONT></FONT> </DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=4><FONT face="Courier, Courier New"><SPAN
style="FONT-SIZE: 13px">Manfred Stede, Universitaet Potsdam<BR>Michael
Grabski, Technische Universitaet Berlin<BR>Luuk Lagerwerf, Vrije Universiteit
Amsterdam<BR></SPAN></FONT></FONT><FONT size=4><FONT
face="Courier, Courier New"><SPAN
style="FONT-SIZE: 13px"></SPAN></FONT></FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=4><FONT face="Courier, Courier New"><SPAN
style="FONT-SIZE: 13px"></SPAN></FONT></FONT> </DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=4><FONT face="Courier, Courier New"><SPAN
style="FONT-SIZE: 13px"><FONT size=4><STRONG>Multidisciplinary Approaches to
Discourse 2005 (MAD'05)</STRONG></FONT> is the sixth in a series of
small-scale, high-quality workshops held bi-annually since 1995.<BR>The theme
of the 2005 WS is 'salience in discourse'.<BR><BR><BR>Workshop Theme: <FONT
size=4><STRONG>Salience in Discourse<BR></STRONG></FONT><BR><BR>Understanding
language involves mapping a linear sequence of information<BR>units (in the
case of texts: characters or words) to a structured<BR>representation. Various
proposals for such structures are under discussion,<BR>but many of them share
an underlying assumption: Structure arises from some<BR>elements of the text
being more prominent than others. The term salience is<BR>often used for this
phenomenon, but it comes in many different flavours.<BR>The workshop aims to
compare these flavours, to look for commonalities, but<BR>also to sharpen
distinctions where appropriate. We thus invite<BR>contributions from
linguistic, psychological, computational perspectives on<BR>salience in
discourse, including but not limited to notions such as
the<BR>following:<BR><BR><BR>- Information structure is well known for a wide
varitey of competing<BR>conceptions, but they all relate to salience in one
way or another:<BR>focus/background, topic/focus, theme/rheme etc.<BR>-
Anaphora resolution (and, in the opposite direction, production
of<BR>referring expressions) can be modelled using salience, as it has been
done<BR>for instance in conceptions of referent accessibility (e.g., Prince
1981).<BR>- Choices in sentence structure between coordination, subordination,
or<BR>nominalization can be claimed to have ramifications for
discourse<BR>processing, leading to conceptions of foreground/background
structures on<BR>the text level (e.g., Talmy 2000).<BR>- Similarly, most
theories of discourse structure involve salience, e.g..<BR>the notion of
nuclearity in 'Rhetorical structure theory' (RST,<BR>Mann/Thompson 1988), or
the distinction between coordinating and<BR>subordinating relations in
'Segmented Discourse Representation Theory'<BR>(SDRT, Asher/Lascarides
2003).<BR>- The semantics of definite descriptions and pronouns have been
analyzed in<BR>terms of salience, for instance by Lewis (1979).<BR>- Other
tasks of language processing, such as word-sense disambiguation or<BR>metaphor
processing (e.g., Giora and Fein 2004), are sometimes modelled<BR>with
salience-inspired approaches.<BR><BR><BR>Attendance:<BR>Following the
tradition of the earlier workshops, attendance will be<BR>limited to 30
people. Speakers of accepted papers are automatically granted<BR>a seat; the
remaining ones are assigned on first-come-first-serve
basis.<BR><BR><BR>Invited speakers:<BR>In addition to the regular paper
sessions, the workshop features the<BR>following invited talks:<BR>- Kristiina
Jokinen (Univ. of Helsinki) on salience in language and other<BR>modalities in
dialog<BR>- Thomas Noll (TU Berlin) on salience in language and music<BR>- Jon
Oberlander (Univ. of Edinburgh) on salience in language and reasoning<BR>-
Michael Tanenhaus (Univ. of Rochester) on salience in language and
vision<BR><BR><BR>Submission:<BR>Electronic submissions (PDF format) are
strongly preferred. Papers should<BR>not be longer than eight pages (including
figures and references), using<BR>11pt font. For the final versions of
accepted papers, precise formatting<BR>instructions (for Word and LateX) will
be issued.<BR><BR><BR>Send your submission until May 20, 2005 per email to
mad05@ling.uni-potsdam.de<BR><BR><BR>Program Committee:<BR>Jennifer Arnold
(Univ. of Rochester, USA)<BR>Salvatore Attardo (Youngstown State University,
USA)<BR>Rachel Giora (Tel Aviv University, Israel)<BR>Michael Grabski (TU
Berlin, Germany)<BR>Ivana Kruijff-Korbayova (Univ. des Saarlandes,
Germany)<BR>Luuk Lagerwerf (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, NL)<BR>Massimo
Poesio (University of Essex, UK)<BR>Manfred Stede (Univ. Potsdam,
Germany)<BR>Alice ter Meulen (Center for Language and Cognition, Groningen,
NL)<BR><BR><BR>Schedule:<BR>Submission deadline: May 20, 2005<BR>Notification
of acceptance: July 18, 2005<BR>Final papers due: August 19, 2005<BR>Workshop:
Oct 5-8, 2005<BR><BR><BR>Organizers:<BR>Manfred Stede, Universitaet
Potsdam<BR>Michael Grabski, Technische Universitaet Berlin<BR>Luuk Lagerwerf,
Vrije Universiteit
Amsterdam<BR><BR><BR><BR></DIV></SPAN></FONT></FONT></BLOCKQUOTE>
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