11.1295, Calls: Optimal Interpretations, Coordination Models

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LINGUIST List:  Vol-11-1295. Fri Jun 9 2000. ISSN: 1068-4875.

Subject: 11.1295, Calls: Optimal Interpretations, Coordination Models

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

1)
Date:  Thu, 08 Jun 2000 11:15:16 +0200
From:  Helen de Hoop <Helen.deHoop at let.uu.nl> (by way of Helen de Hoop       <Helen.deHoop at let.uu.nl>)
Subject:  Optimal Interpretations of Words and Constituents

2)
Date:  Thu, 8 Jun 2000 16:01:58 +0200
From:  Andrea Omicini <aomicini at deis.unibo.it>
Subject:  Coordination Models, Languages and Applications (ACM SAC 2001)

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

Date:  Thu, 08 Jun 2000 11:15:16 +0200
From:  Helen de Hoop <Helen.deHoop at let.uu.nl> (by way of Helen de Hoop       <Helen.deHoop at let.uu.nl>)
Subject:  Optimal Interpretations of Words and Constituents

CALL FOR PAPERS

Conference on
Optimal Interpretations of Words and Constituents

Date: August 30-31, 2000
Location: UiL OTS, Utrecht University

Invited speakers:  	Joan Bresnan (Stanford University)
                   	Miriam Butt (University of Konstanz)
			Henk Zeevat (University of Amsterdam)

Invited forum:     Chair:	Henk Verkuyl (Utrecht)
	     Participants:	Peter Ackema (Utrecht)
				Reinhard Blutner (Berlin)
				Alice ter Meulen (Groningen)

Organizers: Petra Hendriks, Helen de Hoop, Henriëtte de Swart

In principle, Optimality Theory (OT) is not restricted to any specific
aspect of language. Only recently, OT has been applied to semantic
analysis (Hendriks & De Hoop, to appear, De Hoop & De Swart, to
appear, Van der Does & De Hoop 1998, Blutner 1999). Against the
backdrop of the general problem of optimizing interpretation, the aim
of this conference is to deal with the relation between morphology and
semantics.

In the nominal as well as the verbal domain, rich morphology is of
utmost importance to the optimization of interpretation. If an input
contains morphological information, the effect of that information is
not easily overruled by any other kind of information (such as
pragmatics or prosody), but it is not certain whether it cannot be
verruled at all. In general, the existence of (morphological)
alternatives raises strong interpretive blocking effects. When there
are two optimal lexical forms, it is economical to use them for
different interpretations. Thus, when there are two pronominal forms
for the third person singular, one might be optimally interpreted as a
continuing topic, the other one as a shifted topic or
focus. Similarly, when there are two types of objective case, one
might be used for the objects of telic predicates, the other for
atelic objects.

Questions that might be addressed during the conference include the
following:

- What are the different types of constraints that resolve
lexical ambiguities and how do these interact?

- What is the adequate treatment of the roles of the speaker's
perspective (generation) and the hearer's perspective
(comprehension) in the analysis of the interpretation of
words/constituents?

- More specifically, how do markedness constraints (that
penalize complex structures and hence tend to allow lexical
and structural ambiguity) and faithfulness constraints (that
disfavour ambiguity and hence favour morphological richness)
interact?

The conference has room for about ten selected talks. Authors should
submit their abstract and additional information (name, affiliation,
e-mail address and title of the paper) by e-mail in plain ascii text
(attachmentsy"20 are not accepted!) Please send your abstracts to:
helen.dehoop at let.uu.nl

The DEADLINE for submission is July 5, 2000.
Authors will be notified of acceptance by July 14.


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

Date:  Thu, 8 Jun 2000 16:01:58 +0200
From:  Andrea Omicini <aomicini at deis.unibo.it>
Subject:  Coordination Models, Languages and Applications (ACM SAC 2001)

                     CALL FOR PAPERS AND REFEREES
                     ============================


          2001 ACM Symposium on Applied Computing (SAC 2001)

   Special Track on Coordination Models, Languages and Applications


                          March 11-14, 2001
                            Las Vegas, USA

                http://lia.deis.unibo.it/confs/SAC01/


SAC 2001
~~~~~~~~
Over  the past  fifteen years,  the ACM Symposium on Applied Computing
(SAC) has become  a primary forum  for applied computer scientists and
application developers from around  the world to interact and  present
their work.  SAC 2001  is sponsored by the ACM Special Interest Groups
on Applied Computing (SIGAPP) and Biomedical Computing  (SIGBIO).  SAC
2001 is hosted by the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.

Authors  are invited to contribute  original  papers in all  areas  of
experimental computing and  application  development for the technical
sessions. There  will be a number of special tracks on  such issues as
Programming Languages,  Parallel  and  Distributed  Computing,  Mobile
Computing, Multimedia and Visualization, etc.


Coordination Models, Languages and Applications Track
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A  special track on   coordination models, languages and  applications
will be held at SAC 2001.   The term "coordination"  here is used in a
rather  broad sense covering traditional   models and languages  (e.g.
ones based on the Shared Dataspace, CHAM and IWIM metaphors)  but also
other  related  formalisms  and  concepts  such  as  configuration and
architectural description frameworks,  systems  modeling  abstractions
and  languages,  programming skeletons,  social aspects of multi-agent
systems, etc.

Major topics of interest include but are not limited to the following:

   * Novel models, languages, programming and implementation techniques.
   * Relationship with other computational models such as object
     oriented, declarative (functional, logic, constraint) programming
     or extensions of them with coordination capabilities.
   * Applications (especially where the industry is involved).
   * Theoretical aspects (semantics, reasoning, verification).
   * Software architectures and software engineering techniques.
   * Configuration and Architecture Description Languages.
   * Middleware platforms (e.g. CORBA).
   * All aspects related to the modeling of Information Systems
     (groupware, Internet and the Web, workflow management, CSCW).
   * Coordination of multi-agent systems (models, technologies and
     applications), including mobile and intelligent agents.
   * Coordination technologies and systems.


Track Program Chair
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Andrea Omicini				

LIA, DEIS, Facolta' di Ingegneria
Universita' degli Studi di Bologna
Viale Risorgimento, 2 -- 40136 Bologna, ITALY

mailto:aomicini at deis.unibo.it
voice: +39 051 2093023 -- fax: +39 051 2093073
http://lia.deis.unibo.it/~ao/


Guidelines for Submission
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Original papers from  the above-mentioned or  other related areas will
be considered.   This  includes  three categories  of  submissions: 1)
original and unpublished  research; 2) reports of innovative computing
applications in the arts, sciences, engineering, business, government,
education  and industry;  and   3) reports  of successful   technology
transfer  to new problem domains.   Each submitted paper will be fully
refereed  and undergo  a  blind  review process    by at least   three
referees. The accepted papers  in all categories  will be published in
the ACM SAC 2001 proceedings.

Submission guidelines must be strictly followed:

   * Submit your paper electronically in either PDF or postscript format
     to the Track Program Chair of the SAC 2001 Special Track on
     Coordination Models, Languages and Applications (whose address is
     shown above). Neither hardcopy nor fax submissions will be accepted.

   * The author(s) name(s) and address(es) must not appear in the body
     of the paper, and self-reference should be in the third person.
     This is to facilitate blind review.

   * The body of the paper should not exceed 5,000 words (approximately
     15 pages, double-spaced).

   * A separate cover sheet (in the case of electronic submission this
     should be sent separately from the main paper) should show the title
     of the paper, the author(s) name(s) and affiliation(s), and the
     address (including e-mail, telephone, and fax) to which
     correspondence should be sent.

   * All submissions must be received by September 1, 2000.


Referees
~~~~~~~~
Over the last three years,  the Special Track  on Coordination Models,
Languages and Applications has built its success also over the work of
many volunteer referees.  Anyone  wishing  to review  papers  for this
special track  should contact  the Track Program Chair  at the address
shown above.

Track Home Page
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Further information can be found at the special track home page:

		http://lia.deis.unibo.it/confs/SAC01/


Important Dates
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
   * September 1, 2000: Paper Submission
   * October  13, 2000: Author Notification
   * November  1, 2000: Camera-Ready Copy

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