9.147, Calls: ESSLLI'98 (2nd), CogSci Summer School

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LINGUIST List:  Vol-9-147. Sat Jan 31 1998. ISSN: 1068-4875.

Subject: 9.147, Calls: ESSLLI'98 (2nd), CogSci Summer School

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 ==========================================================================

Please do not use abbreviations or acronyms for your conference unless
you explain them in your text.  Many people outside your area of
specialization will not recognize them. Also, if you are posting a
second call for the same event, please keep the message short.  Thank
you for your cooperation.

=================================Directory=================================

1)
Date:  Fri, 30 Jan 1998 00:02:46 +0100 (MET)
From:  Detmar Meurers <dm at sfs.nphil.uni-tuebingen.de>
Subject:  Current Topics in Constraint-Based Theories of Germanic Syntax (2.CFP)

2)
Date:  Fri, 30 Jan 1998 17:43:33 +0200
From:  CogSci Summer School <school at cogs.nbu.acad.bg>
Subject:  Workshop on Analogy

-------------------------------- Message 1 -------------------------------

Date:  Fri, 30 Jan 1998 00:02:46 +0100 (MET)
From:  Detmar Meurers <dm at sfs.nphil.uni-tuebingen.de>
Subject:  Current Topics in Constraint-Based Theories of Germanic Syntax (2.CFP)


Abstracts due: 15. February


                    ESSLLI-98 Workshop on
CURRENT TOPICS IN CONSTRAINT-BASED THEORIES OF GERMANIC SYNTAX
                    August 17 - 21, 1998


                 A workshop held as part of the
10th European Summer School in Logic, Language and Information
                          (ESSLLI-98)
           August 17 - 28, 1998, Saarbrueken, Germany


                        ** SECOND CALL FOR PAPERS **


ORGANIZERS: Tibor Kiss and Detmar Meurers (IBM Germany and
Univ. Tuebingen)

Web site: http://www.dcs.warwick.ac.uk/~esslli98/workshops.html

BACKGROUND: A number of approaches to Germanic languages (excluding
English) have been developed in constraint-based theories like HPSG
and LFG.  Apart from the issue of empirical adequacy, formal issues
were raised, among them:

  - the nature of complex predicates and the mechanisms used to
    formalize them
  - linearization versus movement analyses of various phenomena
  - the nature of functional projections
  - configurational and non-configurational properties of scope
    determination

The idea of this workshop is to provide a forum to present and discuss
current approaches exploring such empirical and formal issues of the
syntax of Germanic languages (excluding English).  Focusing on
Germanic rather than on a particular syntactic theory is intended to
allow for more inter-framework discussion.

WORKSHOP FORMAT:
The workshop will consist of five sessions, with two 30+10-minute
presentations in each session.

SUBMISSION: All researchers in the area, but especially Ph.D. students
and young researchers, are encouraged to submit an extended abstract
of 2000-3000 words either as hardcopy or electronically (postscript
only).

The accepted papers will be made available in a summer school reader.
If sufficiently many high-quality papers are submitted, we intend to
publish them in an edited volume.

Submissions should be sent before 15. February 1998 to one of the
following two organizers:

  Tibor Kiss                        Detmar Meurers
  IBM Germany                       Universitaet Tuebingen
  Vangerowstr. 18                   Seminar fuer Sprachwissenschaft
  D-69115 Heidelberg                Kleine Wilhelmstr. 113
  Germany                           D-72074 Tuebingen
                                    Germany

  tibor at heidelbg.ibm.com            dm at sfs.nphil.uni-tuebingen.de

REGISTRATION: Workshop contributors will be required to register for
ESSLLI-98, but they will be eligible for a reduced registration fee.

IMPORTANT DATES:
        Feb 15, 98: Deadline for submissions
        Apr 15, 98: Notification of acceptance
        May 15, 98: Deadline for final copy
        Aug 17, 98: Start of workshop

FURTHER INFORMATION: To obtain further information about ESSLLI-98
please visit the ESSLLI-98 home page at
http://www.coli.uni-sb.de/esslli


-------------------------------- Message 2 -------------------------------

Date:  Fri, 30 Jan 1998 17:43:33 +0200
From:  CogSci Summer School <school at cogs.nbu.acad.bg>
Subject:  Workshop on Analogy

Workshop
Advances in Analogy Research:
Integration of Theory and Data from the Cognitive, Computational, and
Neural Sciences
Sofia, July 17-20, 1998

Aims:
This workshop is intended to stimulate the researchers in the field of
analogy to cooperate more intensively and to integrate various
approaches and data in their study. Its aim is to advance our
understanding of the cognitive mechanisms of analogy-making, i.e. how
people notice/perceive analogies, how they retrieve analogs from
memory or how they construct them, how they map and transfer knowledge
from one domain to another, how they combine knowledge from multiple
analogs or how they combine analogy with rule-based reasoning, how
they generalize and learn from the analogies made, how they use
analogies for problem solving, explanation, argumentation,
creation. What is the place of analogy among the various cognitive
processes, such as perception, thinking, memory, learning, etc.  What
is the role of analogy in human development? Which are the brain
structures involved in analogy-making processes? What kind of deficits
do brain-damaged patients exhibit?

This workshop will be highly interdisciplinary and will make a serious
attempt to integrate the knowledge researchers have accumulated on
analogy-making in various domains: Artificial
Intelligence/Computational Modeling, Cognitive Psychology,
Developmental Psychology, Neuropsychology, Philosophy, Cognitive
Linguistics, as well as various applications in Education, Legal and
Political Reasoning, etc. A serious attempt will be made to integrate
all the positive results obtained so far in theories of
analogy-making, computational modeling, and experimental work.

The workshop participants will participate in numerous formal and
informal discussions which we hope will lead to systematization of the
knowledge in the field, formulating established facts, open issues,
and ideas for new approaches.

Format of the workshop:
The workshop will consist of key talks (45 min) (see the list of key
talks), short papers (20 min), poster presentations, round table
thematic discussions, working group sessions, informal discussions,
concluding discussions on ideas for future work and cooperative
projects.

Pre-Proceedings of the workshop (containing all the accepted papers)
will be published in advance and distributed to the participants, so
that we can focus on discussions and joint work at the workshop.

Submission instructions
Paper and poster submissions should be made both electronically (in
RTF format) and in hard copy (A4 or US letter (11" x 8.5") paper
format) following these instructions. Papers should be no more than 8
pages long, poster abstracts - one page. The text should be formatted
in two columns with an overall width of 14 cm and length of 20 cm,
with 0.7 cm between the columns. Use 10 point Times Roman with 11
point vertical spacing, unless otherwise specified. The title should
be 14 point, bold, centered, 0.5 cm below the top margin. Authors'
names should be in 11 point, bold, and centered; authors' affiliation,
postal address, and e-mail address should be in ordinary 10 point,
centered. First-level headings should be 12 point, bold, initial caps,
and centered. Second-level headings should be 11 point, initial caps,
bold, and flush left. Third-level headings should be 10 point, bold,
initial caps, and flush left. Use standard APA citation format,
e.g. (McClelland & Rumelhart, 1981).

Send your submissions electronically to analogy at cogs.nbu.acad.bg
and my regular mail to:
Boicho Kokinov - Analogy'98
Cognitive Science Department
New Bulgarian University
21, Montevideo Str.
Sofia 1635, Bulgaria

Timetable

Deadline for workshop registration - March 1st,  1998
Deadline for submission of papers - March 1st,  1998
Deadline for poster abstracts - March 20th, 1998
Notification of Acceptance - April 15th, 1998
Invited participants' deadline for papers - June 1st, 1998
Publication of the Workshop Proceedings - June 30th, 1998
Workshop - July 17-20, 1998, (arrival 16th, departure 21st)

Participants and Funding

Participation in the workshop is mainly by invitation to ensure high
quality and balance of representatives of various schools of thought,
of various disciplines, of various countries and continents. The
organizers hope that all these schools and geographic regions will be
represented. The following list of invitees is provisional and open
for additions. The workshop is, however, open to other participants as
well, up to the upper limit of 50 participants.

The organizers are looking for some funding which would allow us to
support some of the participants for their participation in the
workshop. However, as this is still uncertain, we would like to kindly
ask the potential participants to look for their own funding sources
and to try to ensure their participation in advance.

Co-events

The workshop will take place during the 5th International Summer
School in Cognitive Science (July 13-25, 1998) which will offer an
opportunity to have external critics and advisors from well known
researchers working in other areas of cognitive science.

Location

Sofia is an old city first established by the Thracians about
4000BC. There are still some ruins from the old Roman time city. The
National History Museum holds some fascinating gold treasures from
Thracian times. There is a small church with frescos from the 12th
century painted in a realistic Renaissance style a long time before
the Renaissance in Europe started.  Not very far from Sofia is the
beautiful Rila monastery as well as some old towns like Plovdiv (with
an old town part and a Roman amphitheater) and Koprivstitza. You may
also want to combine your trip with a holyday at the Black Sea side.

Organizing Committee:

Dedre Gentner (Northwestern Univ., USA) gentner at nwu.edu - Co-Director
Keith Holyoak (Univ. of California at Los Angeles, USA)
holyoak at lifesci.ucla.edu edu - Co-Director
Boicho Kokinov (New Bunlgarian Univ., Bulgaria)
	kokinov at cogs.nbu.acad.bg edu - Co-Director
Robert French (Univ. of Liege, Belgium) rfrench at ulg.ac.be
Erica Melis (Univ. of Saarland, Germany) melis at cs.uni-sb.de

List of key talks

Umberto Eco - (not confirmed yet)
Douglas Hofstadter - Analogy as the Core of Cognition
Keith Holyoak - The Place of Analogy in a Physical Symbol System
Dedre Gentner - Comparison and Cognition
Gilles Fauconnier - Analogy and Conceptual Integration
Jaime Carbonell - Analogy in Problem Solving, from the Routine to the
	Creative
Boicho Kokinov - Analogy is like Cognition: Complex, Emergent,
Context-Sensitive
Mark Keane - Why Conceptual Combination is Seldom Analogy
David Premack - Analogies in Chimpanzees
Andy Meltzoff - The Origins and Early Development of Analogy in the
Preverbal Period
Usha Goswami - Analogical Reasoning in Children
Graeme Halford - The Problem of Structural Complexity in Cognitive
Processes: A Metric Based on Representational Rank
Ken Forbus - Qualitative Mental Models: Simulations or Memories?
Paul Thagard - Emotional Analogies
James Hampton - Analogy is like categorization: thoughts on the role
of conceptual structure in analogical reasoning
Adam Biela - Analogical Resoning as a Base for Structuring Cognitive
Schemata in New Situations: A Case of Economic Transformation in
Post-Communist Countries

 List of invited participants

Ron Ferguson (Northwestern University, USA) ferguson at ils.nwu.edu
Ken Kurtz (Northwestern University, USA) kjk at nwu.edu
Arthur Markman (Columbia University, USA)
	markman at paradox.psych.columbia.edu
John Hummel (UCLA, USA) jhummel at lifesci.ucla.edu
Richard Catrambone (Georgia Institute of Technology, USA)
	rc7 at prism.gatech.edu
Charles Wharton (National Institutes of Health, USA)
	wharton at codon.nih.gov
Barbara Spellman (U. of Virginia, USA) spellman at psyvax.psy.utexas.edu
Laura Novick (Vanderbilt University, USA)
	novicklr at ctrvax.vanderbilt.edu
Mary Jo Rattermann (Hampshire, USA) mratter1 at swarthmore.edu
Judy DeLoache (U. of Illinois, USA) jdeloach@[s.psych.]uiuc.edu
Manuela Veloso(CMU, USA) mmv at cs.cmu.edu
David Leake (Indiana University, USA) leake at cs.indiana.edu
Robert Goldstone (Indiana University, USA) rgoldsto at ucs.indiana.edu
Jim Marshall (Indiana University, USA) marshall at cogsci.indiana.edu
Brian Bowdle (Indiana University, USA) bbowdle at indiana.edu
Melanie Mitchell (Santa Fe Institute, USA) mm at santafe.edu
Miriam Bassok (U. of Washington, USA) mbassok at u.washington.edu
Roger Thompson (Franklin & Marshall College, Lancaster, PA, USA)
r_thompson at acad.fandm.edu
Nancy Nersessian (Georgia Tech, USA) nancyn at cc.gatech.edu
John Clement (University of Massachusets, MA, USA)
	jclement at educ.umass.edu
Eve Sweetser (UC Berkeley, USA) sweetser at cogsci.berkeley.edu
Adele Goldberg (UCSD, USA) aegoldberg at ucsd.edu
Lokendra Shastri (UC Berkeley, USA) schastri at icsi.berkeley.edu
Thomas Ward (Texas A&M University, USA) tbw at psyc.tamu.edu
Ronald Finke (Texas A&M University, USA) raf at psyc.tamu.edu
Jim Herriot (Sun, USA) Jim.Herriot at Eng.Sun.COM
Cameron Shelley (U. of Waterloo, Canada) cpshelle at watarts.uwaterloo.ca
Bipin Indurkhya (Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, Japan)
	bipin at cc.tuat.ac.jp
Hiroaki Suzuki (Aoyama Gakuin University, Japan) susan at ri.aoyama.ac.jp
Tony Plate (Victoria U of Wellington, New Zealand)
	Tony.Plate at MCS.VUW.AC.NZ
Pentti Kanerva (SICS, Sweden) kanerva at sics.se
Robert French (University of Liege, Belgium) rfrench at ulg.ac.be
John A Barnden (University of Birmingham, UK)
	<J.A.Barnden at cs.bham.ac.uk>
Michael Ramscar (University of Edinburgh, UK) Michael at aisb.ed.ac.uk
Bruce Burns (U. of Potsdam, Germany) burns at persius.rz.uni-potsdam.de
Friedrich Wilkening ( U. of Tuebingen, Germany)
	wilk at mailserv.zdv.uni-tuebingen.de
	friedrich.wilkening at uni-tuebingen.de
Michael Waldmann (Max-Planck Institute of Psychological Research in
	Munich, Germany) waldmann at mpipf-muenchen.mpg.de
Meredith Gattis (Max-Planck Institute of Psychological Research in
	Munich, Germany) gattis at mpipf-muenchen.mpg.de
Erica Melis (Univ. of Saarland, Germany) melis at cs.uni-sb.de
Cristina Cacciari (University of Bologna, Italy)
	cacciari at psibo.unibo.it
Stella Vosniadou (University of Athens, Greece)
	svosniad at atlas.uoa.ariadne-t.gr
Merry Bullock (University of Vilnus, Estonia) mxb.apa at email.apa.org,
	merry at vm.ee
Maciej Haman (University of Warsaw, Poland) MEH at sci.psych.uw.edu.pl
Dan Simon (Haifa University, Israel) dsimon at research.haifa.ac.il

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