Digital Tools Summit/Linguistics

Emily M. Bender ebender at u.washington.edu
Sat Feb 25 06:40:40 UTC 2006


    DT-Summit/Linguistics: A Digital Tools Summit for Linguistics
	      22-23 June 2006, Michigan State University

			   Call for Papers

		       Deadline:  31 March 2006

The DTS-L (Digital Tools Summit for Linguistics,
http://www.ku.edu/pri/DTSL/) is a one-time workshop on digital tools
and cyberinfrastructure development in linguistics, for language
software engineers and computational linguists, as well as
linguists. The workshop aims to facilitate new interdisciplinary
collaboration to design and create digital tools specifically for
linguistic analysis, and thereby stimulate new funding
initiatives. During the workshop, participants will prioritize and
draft tools and data structures. They will work largely in interest
groups (e.g. in data annotation, migration, visualization, and
resource interoperation) and for each interest area will prepare
design sketches of and implementation plans for at least one tool.  We
particularly want to address the needs of non-techno!
 logically-oriented
language researchers, simulating the development of truly useful,
stable, cross-platform, open-source tools that are both small
(e.g. Unicode conversion scripts) and large (e.g. a modular suite of
linguistic data- analysis tools) in scope.

	   The Summit will take place June 22-23, 2006 at Michigan State
University, in association with both the summer Linguistic Society of
America meeting (http://www.lsadc.org/info/meet- summer06-cfp.cfm) and
the E-MELD [Electronic Metastructures for Endangered Language Data]
meeting ("Tools and Standards: The State of the Art,"
http://emeld.org/workshop/2006/); DTS-L and E-MELD will meet together
on the morning of 22 June.

	We encourage submissions from Indigenous/First Nations
language workers and graduate students, for whom a limited number of
travel and housing subsidies will be available, pending funding.

 Selection

Participants will not submit abstracts or make individual oral
presentations of their own projects!
 .  Instead, since this summit is
based on discussions in small working
 groups, participants are
requested to submit one-page issue statements, which will form the
basis for the working group themes for the first conference day. In
these issue statements, we urge applicants to present one issue or
idea which would serve to improve linguistic scholarship. Submissions
should consider and explicate one or more of the following issues:

1. What are the most pressing needs among possible cyberinfrastructure 
      and/or digital tools for linguistics?
2. What are some enduring challenges in creating cyberinfrastructure 
      and/or digital tools for linguistics?
3. Which existing resources can be leveraged to create digital tools 
      for linguistics? 
4. How can documentation tools make language resources (e.g. text, 
      lexical or morphological corpora) more readily available for 
      historical, typological, and other theoretical analyses?  

Each issue paper must be accompanied by a short (half page or less) biography. 

Submissions addr!
 ess: pri at ku.edu
Deadline:           Issue statements and biographies are due on 31 March 2006. 
Length: 	    Issue statements: one page. Biographies: one half-page.



More information about the HPSG-L mailing list