12.944, Calls: Natural Lang Generation, Salish Languages

The LINGUIST Network linguist at linguistlist.org
Thu Apr 5 16:25:00 UTC 2001


LINGUIST List:  Vol-12-944. Thu Apr 5 2001. ISSN: 1068-4875.

Subject: 12.944, Calls: Natural Lang Generation, Salish Languages

Moderators: Anthony Aristar, Wayne State U.<aristar at linguistlist.org>
            Helen Dry, Eastern Michigan U. <hdry at linguistlist.org>
            Andrew Carnie, U. of Arizona <carnie at linguistlist.org>

Reviews (reviews at linguistlist.org):
	Simin Karimi, U. of Arizona
	Terence Langendoen, U. of Arizona

Editors (linguist at linguistlist.org):
	Karen Milligan, WSU 		Naomi Ogasawara, EMU
	Lydia Grebenyova, EMU		Jody Huellmantel, WSU
	James Yuells, WSU		Michael Appleby, EMU
	Marie Klopfenstein, WSU		Ljuba Veselinova, Stockholm U.

Software: John Remmers, E. Michigan U. <remmers at emunix.emich.edu>
          Gayathri Sriram, E. Michigan U. <gayatri at linguistlist.org>

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Editor for this issue: Jody Huellmantel <jody at linguistlist.org>
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=================================Directory=================================

1)
Date:  Wed, 4 Apr 2001 12:36:13 EDT
From:  Priscilla Rasmussen <rasmusse at cs.rutgers.edu>
Subject:  Natural Language Generation (ACL 2001) DEADLINE EXTENSION

2)
Date:  Wed, 04 Apr 2001 22:07:04 -0700
From:  UBCWPL <Linguistics-UBCWPL at arts.ubc.ca>
Subject:  Salish and Neighboring Languages (ICSNL 36)

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

Date:  Wed, 4 Apr 2001 12:36:13 EDT
From:  Priscilla Rasmussen <rasmusse at cs.rutgers.edu>
Subject:  Natural Language Generation (ACL 2001) DEADLINE EXTENSION


[ Extended submission deadline: **22 April** ]


                            ACL/EACL 2001 Workshop

            8th EUROPEAN WORKSHOP ON NATURAL LANGUAGE GENERATION

                               6-7 July 2001
                              Toulouse, France

                http://www.cs.unca.edu/~bruce/acl01/NLG.html

                     Sponsored by IBM, Endorsed by SIGGEN

- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
Natural language generation (NLG) constitutes the production of meaningful
texts in natural languages from some underlying non-linguistic
representation of information. Accomplishing this goal may be envisioned
for a number of different purposes, including standardized and/or
multi-lingual reports, summaries, machine translation, dialog applications,
and embedding in multi-media and hypertext environments. Consequently, the
automated production of language is associated with a large number of
highly diverse tasks whose appropriate orchestration in high quality poses
a variety of theoretical and practical problems. Relevant issues include
content selection, text organization, the production of referring
expressions, aggregation, lexicalization, and surface realization, as well
as coordination with other media.

This workshop is part of a bi-annual series of workshops about natural
language generation that runs since 1987. Previous European workshops have
been held at Royaumont, Edinburgh, Judenstein, Pisa, Leiden, Duisburg, and
Toulouse. The goal of the workshop is to be an informal meeting which
facilitates the dissemination of knowledge and expertise in the field. The
workshop will focus on the following topics:

   * Search methods for NLG (in content planning and realization)

     There seems to be a substantial discrepancy between
     application-oriented systems and principled approaches to NLG.
     Accomodating a standard pipeline architecture with suitable heuristic
     preferences to the intended functionality of a system stands in
     contrast to several principled approaches to searching which have been
     tried out so far. These include blackboard architectures, constraint
     propagation and, more recently genetic algorithms and statistical
     techniques. A comparison of these methods in terms of their potential
     and limitations is likely to improve understanding about this issue.
     Gained insights could prove fruitful for building applications in a
     more general and, thus, better reusable way, especially in large-scale
     applications such as summarization and machine translation.

   * Differences in information organization between source and
     presentation specifications (and methods to bridge between these)

     Whether the generation task is to verbally express contents of some
     knowledge base or to produce multi-lingual presentations from
     language-neutral or similar representations, there are strong
     similarities in building the target representations: In the
     overwhelming number of cases, the ordering and embedding of elements
     in the source representation is reflected by the ordering and
     embedding of their corresponding realizations at the surface. Often,
     this reflection is systematic, many times even simple. But a few cases
     prove complex and involve a major restructuring of the surface
     structure when compared to the source structure. A major emphasis of
     this topic is on collecting such complex cases, identifying
     commonalities between them and discussing restructuring techniques.

Accepted papers on these and related topics will be scheduled for
presentation.

The majority of the time will be devoted to discussions, either in
sequence or in parallel, depending on the number of participants. We
are considering organizing a panel. For the focus topics above, we
will contact a number of competent researchers to address the topic
from a specific perspective according to their experience. In
addition, we will ask some of them to prepare material / concrete
examples for discussions.


WORKSHOP CHAIRS

          Helmut Horacek    Univ. of the Saarland
          Nicolas Nicolov   IBM T.J. Watson Research Center
          Leo Wanner        Univ. of Stuttgart


PROGRAMME COMMITTEE

          John Bateman      Univ. of Bremen
          Dan Cristea       Univ. of Iasi
          Robert Dale       Macquarie University
          Laurence Danlos   Universite Paris 7
          Marc Dymetman     Xerox Research Centre Europe, Grenoble
          Michael Elhadad   Ben-Gurion Univ.
          Kristiina Jokinen Univ. of Art and Design Helsinki
          Richard Kittredge Univ. of Montreal & CoGenTex
          Daniel Marcu      ISI, Univ. of Southern California
          Chris Mellish     Univ. of Edinburgh
          Sergei Nirenburg  CRL, New Mexico
          Owen Rambow       AT&T Research
          Ehud Reiter       Univ. of Aberdeen
          Manfred Stede     Technical University of Berlin
          Michael Zock      LIMSI, CNRS


SUBMISSIONS (papers, posters, demos)

Papers describing original work in the area of NLG in particular related to
the workshop focus topics above should be submitted electronically. Papers
should be 6-8 pages long in PDF format. We recommend a A4, two-column
format like the ACL proceedings: http://acl2001.dfki.de/style/

We also invite poster and demo submissions (free format, up to 6 page, PDF).

The submissions should be associated with a cover email containing the
following information (ASCII text):

          # TITLE:    <title of the paper>
          # AUTHORS:  <list of authors>
          # EMAIL:    <email of author(s) for correspondence>
          # KEYWORDS: <keywords, topic sub-areas, ...>
          # TYPE:     <paper> / <poster> / <demo>
          # ABSTRACT: <abstract of the paper>

Send your submission to Helmut Horacek <horacek at cs.uni-sb.de>.


IMPORTANT DATES

          Paper submissions           *** 22 April 2001 ***
          Notification of acceptance  6 May 2001
          Camera-ready copies due     16 May 2001
          Registration deadline       as ACL
          Workshop dates              6-7 July 2001


REGISTRATION

The registration fee for the workshop will be posted at a later stage. The
registration fee includes attendance of the workshop and a copy of workshop
proceedings. Follow the registration instructions at the ACL site and
indicate that you would like to attend the NLG workshop.

People wishing to attend the workshop but not submitting papers should send
a notification of attendance: a 1-2 page stating interest to participate,
work done in NLG so far, and potential contributions / material for
discussions about one of the topics. This informationn will help with the
organisation of discussions and allow for an informal and highly
interactive character of the workshop. Notifications of attendance should
be sent to Leo Wanner <wannerlo at informatik.uni-stuttgart.de>.


MORE INFORMATION

          Check the following web site for updates about the NLG workshop:
          http://www.cs.unca.edu/~bruce/acl01/NLG.html


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

Date:  Wed, 04 Apr 2001 22:07:04 -0700
From:  UBCWPL <Linguistics-UBCWPL at arts.ubc.ca>
Subject:  Salish and Neighboring Languages (ICSNL 36)

ANNOUNCEMENT AND CALL FOR PAPERS

Thirty-sixth International Conference on Salish and Neighboring
Languages

August 8, 9, and 10, 2001

This year's conference will be hosted by the Stolo Nation, in conjunction
with the UBC Department of Linguistics. The conference will take place at
the Skowkale Hall which is located on 7686B Chilliwack River Road in
Chilliwack, BC on Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday August 8, 9, and 10.
Papers on all aspects of the study, preservation, and teaching of Salish and
neighboring languages are welcome.

TRAVEL AND ACCOMMODATION

Best Western Rainbow Country Inn  (telephone: 604- 795-3828, address: 43971
Industrial Way, Chilliwack. This is about 10 minutes away from the
conference site).
Chilliwack Motor Inn  (telephone: 604- 792-8501, address: 8120 Young St.,
Chilliwack.  This is about 15 minutes away from the conference).
Comfort Inn  (telephone: 604- 858-0636, address: 45405 Luckakuck Way (right
beside the Cottonwood Mall). This is located about 5 minutes away).
Travel Lodge Inn  (telephone: 604- 792-4240, address:  45466 Yale road,
Chilliwack.  This is located about 10 minutes from conference site).


CONFERENCE FEE

o A registration fee of $40.00 CDN will be charged for the conference
(students $20.00, elders no charge). This will cover on-site costs.


PREPRINTS

o This year the conference preprints will be printed and distributed by the
UBC Working Papers in Linguistics.

IF YOU ARE SUBMITTING A PAPER

o Please follow the UBCWPL style sheet, as follows:

Manuscripts should be printed camera-ready on a laser printer.  Do not
number pages, but pencil numbers lightly on the back of the page.
Font:
-12 point font throughout, footnotes 10 point, all in Times font.

Margins:
-No right justification.
-All margins should be 1 inch except the outside (binding) margin which
should be 1.5 inches.  This means that odd numbered pages (for example, page
1) will have a 1.5 inch margin on the left and a 1 inch margin on the right,
whereas even numbered pages (for example, page 2) will have a 1 inch margin
on the left and a 1.5 inch margin on the right. Top and bottom margins for
all pages are 1 inch.

First Page:
-Leave a blank line, then enter the title of the paper on the next line,
centred and bolded.
-Only capitalize the first word and other standardly capitalized words.
-Leave a blank line, then enter your name, centred but not bolded. On the
next line, state your affiliation e.g. University of British
Columbia centred, but not bolded
-Leave two blank lines, then enter the abstract of the paper.  Abstract
should be indented 0.5 inches on both sides and fully justified.  The
abstract should summarize the main point of the paper and should be less
than 150 words.
-Leave two blank lines then begin with the text.

Spacing and section headings:
-Single space.  Do not leave a blank line between paragraphs.  Indent each
paragraph 0.5 inches.
- Please number your sections starting at 1 (not 0).
- Do not include a final period. For example,
    1 Introduction
    1.1 Consonant inventory
-Bold the headings and left-align (not underlined, centred or italicized.)
-Leave one blank line before each heading, and one after.
-Separate example sentences from the text with one blank line.

Footnotes:
-Put footnotes at the bottom of the page and separate from the text with a
two inch line.
-Footnotes should be single-spaced with no blank line between entries.
-Do not indent.

References:
-Do not start a new page. Rather, leave two blank lines after the last line
of text and then enter the bolded heading 'References' left-aligned.
-Leave one blank line, then begin listing references.
-Single-space references; do not leave blank lines between entries.
-Additional lines of individual references should be indented 0.5 inches
(hanging indent).
Examples:
Book:
Kim, E.  1998.  How to Write a Style Sheet.  New York:  Academic Press.
Article in Journal:
Caldecott, M.  1998.  A Day in the Life of a Graduate Linguistics Student: A
Theoretical
         Approach.  Linguistic Inquiry, 200, 145-160.

If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact the editors:

Linguistics-UBCWPL at arts.ubc.ca


DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION:
Papers for the 36th International Conference on Salish and Neighboring
Languages FRIDAY, June 6, 2001.  Papers received after this will not be
accepted.

Papers should be submitted to:

The editors:
ICSNL 2001
UBCWPL
c/o Department of Linguistics, UBC
E-270 1866 Main Mall
Vancouver, B.C. V6T 1Z1
Canada.

TO ORDER PREPRINTS

Mail order form to UBCWPL at the above address, together with a cheque or
money order made out to the UBC Working Papers in Linguistics.

ICSNL 36 Conference Proceedings Order Form:

I enclose $25.00 CDN/ $20.00 US each, for  (  ) copies of ICSNL 36.

Check one:
(  )  Please mail my copy to the address below.
(  ) Please hold my copy for pickup at the conference.

Add the following mailing charges if you wish your copy to be mailed to
you before the conference:

If ordering from Western Canada: $3.50 CDN
If ordering from Eastern Canada: $5.50 CDN
If ordering from US (surface mail): $6.80 CDN or $4.50 US
If ordering from US (air mail): $9.05 CDN or $6.00 US
If ordering from outside N. America (surface mail): $7.60 CDN or $5.00 US
If ordering from outside N. America (air mail): $17.00 CDN or $12.00 US

Name:

Mailing Address:

e-mail address:

Telephone:

o Orders for a copy of the conference proceeding must be received by June
20, 2001. Only a limited number of copies of ICSNL 36 will be available for
purchase at the conference.


LATE PAPERS

o Late papers will be scheduled as time permits. Authors of late papers are
expected to bring 40 to 50 copies of the entire text of the paper and make
them available the first day of the conference. Be sure to contact Martina
Wiltschko at <wmartina at interchange.ubc.ca> before July 15, if you plan to
present a late paper, to ensure that you can be included in the conference
schedule.

o If you plan to attend the conference, submit a paper, or order preprints,
please e-mail Martina Wiltschko at your earliest convenience. Your response
will help us plan. In addition, feel free to pass this e-mail message on to
anyone else who might be interested in the conference.



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