16.977, Confs: Computational Ling/Colchester, Essex, UK

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LINGUIST List: Vol-16-977. Thu Mar 31 2005. ISSN: 1068 - 4875.

Subject: 16.977, Confs: Computational Ling/Colchester, Essex, UK

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1)
Date: 29-Mar-2005
From: Valia Kordoni < kordoni at coli.uni-sb.de >
Subject: 2nd ACL-SIGSEM Workshop on the Linguistic Dimensions of Prepositions and their Use in Computational Linguistics Formalisms and Applications 

	
-------------------------Message 1 ---------------------------------- 
Date: Thu, 31 Mar 2005 20:05:05
From: Valia Kordoni < kordoni at coli.uni-sb.de >
Subject: 2nd ACL-SIGSEM Workshop on the Linguistic Dimensions of Prepositions and their Use in Computational Linguistics Formalisms and Applications 
 

Fund Drive 2005 is now on! Visit http://linguistlist.org/donate.html to donate now!

2nd ACL-SIGSEM Workshop on the Linguistic Dimensions of Prepositions and their
Use in Computational Linguistics Formalisms and Applications 
Short Title: Prep05 

Date: 19-Apr-2005 - 21-Apr-2005 
Location: Colchester, Essex, United Kingdom 
Contact: Aline Villavicencio 
Contact Email: prep05 at essex.ac.uk 
Meeting URL: http://privatewww.essex.ac.uk/~avill/Prep05.html 

Linguistic Field(s): Anthropological Linguistics; Applied Linguistics; Cognitive
Science; Computational Linguistics; Discourse Analysis; Historical Linguistics;
Language Acquisition; Language Description; Lexicography; Linguistic Theories;
Neurolinguistics; Pragmatics; Psycholinguistics; Semantics; Sociolinguistics;
Syntax; Text/Corpus Linguistics 

Meeting Description: 

In the linguistic and computational linguistic communities, much of the effort
has been devoted to the understanding of the syntax and semantics of  verbs and
nouns. On the other hand, prepositions, partly due to their very  polysemic
nature and the difficulty of identifying (cross-)linguistic regularities, have
received much less attention.

Recently, however, there has been a growing awareness of the difficulties  posed
by prepositions and the importance of providing adequate means of  capturing
them, for many different applications. Several projects have now  focused on the
understanding of certain aspects of prepositions from  perspectives such as
Artificial Intelligence (AI), Natural Language  Processing (NLP),
psycholinguistics and ethnolinguistics. 

For instance, some research has concentrated on spatial or temporal aspects  of
prepositions, and their cross-linguistic differences. Several  investigations
have also been carried out on quite diverse languages,  emphasizing, for
example, monolingual and cross-linguistic contrasts or the  role of prepositions
in syntactic alternations. These observations cover in  general a small group of
closely related prepositions. The semantic  characterization of prepositions has
also motivated the emergence of a few  dedicated logical frameworks and
reasoning procedures.

Languages like English have phrasal verbs, and these combinations of verbs  and
prepositions (in prepositional verbs or verb-particle constructions),  have also
been the subject of considerable effort, going from techniques  for their
automatic extraction from corpora, to methods for the  determination of their
semantics.  Other languages, like Romance languages  or Hindi, either
incorporate the preposition or include it in the  prepositional phrase. All
these configurations are semantically as well as  syntactically of much interest. 

In NLP, PP attachment ambiguities have attracted a lot of attention, with 
different machine learning techniques having been employed with varying  degrees
of success. 

In this context, a successful workshop on prepositions was held in  Toulouse, in
September 2003, with papers presenting research in a wide  variety of topics,
examining prepositions in languages like French,  English, German and Japanese,
some from a more computational approach and  others more linguistic. 

The aim of this workshop is to bring together researchers working on 
prepositions from a variety of backgrounds, such as linguistics, NLP, AI  and
psycholinguistics, providing a forum for discussing, among others, the  syntax,
semantics, description, representation and computational  applications of
prepositions, with the ultimate aim to advance the  state-of-the-art, identify
challenges, and promote future collaborations  among researchers interested in
the different aspects of prepositions. 

REGISTRATION

Information on registration can be found at:
http://privatewww.essex.ac.uk/~avill/registration1.html

PROGRAM COMMITTEE

Anne Abeille (Université Paris 7, France)
Doug Arnold (University of Essex, UK)
Timothy Baldwin (University of Melbourne, Australia)
Colin J Bannard (University of Edinburgh, UK)
Luc Baronian (Stanford University, USA)
John Beavers (Stanford University, USA)
Bob Borsley (University of Essex, UK)
Harry Bunt (Tilburg University, The Netherlands)
Nicoletta Calzolari (Istituto di Linguistica Computazionale, Italy)
Markus Egg (University of Groningen, The Netherlands)
Sonja Eisenbeiss (University of Essex, UK)
Christiane Fellbaum (Princeton University, USA)
Dan Flickinger (Stanford University, USA)
Frederik Fouvry (Saarland University, Germany)
Anette Frank (DFKI, Germany)
Daniele Godard (Université Paris 7, France)
Sanda Harabagiu (University of Texas at Dallas)
Julia Hockenmaier (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
Tracy King (PARC, USA)
Valia Kordoni (Saarland University, Germany)
Anna Korhonen (University of Cambridge, UK)
Jonas Kuhn (University of Texas at Austin, USA)
Ingrid Leung (University of Essex, UK)
Alda Mari (CNRS / ENST Infres, France)
Paola Merlo (University of Geneva, Switzerland)
Gertjan van Noord (University of Groningen, The Netherlands)
Anna Papafragou (University of Delaware, USA)
Steve Pulman (University of Oxford, UK)
Henk van Riemsdijk (Tilburg University, The Netherlands)
Louisa Sadler (University of Essex, UK)
Patrick Saint Dizier (IRIT, France)
Karin Kipper Schuler (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
Advaith Siddharthan (Columbia University, USA)
Melanie Siegel (DFKI, Germany)
Hidetosi Sirai (Chukyo University, Japan)
Andrew Spencer (University of Essex, UK)
Mark Steedman (University of Edinburgh, UK)
Beata Trawinski (University of Tuebingen, Germany)
Jesse Tseng (Loria, France)
Aline Villavicencio (University of Essex, UK) - Workshop Chair
Martin Volk (Stockholms Universitet, Sweden)
Clare Voss (Army Research Laboratory, USA)
Tom Wasow (Stanford University, USA)
Emile van der Zee (University of Lincoln, UK)
Joost Zwarts (Utrecht University, The Netherlands)

PROGRAM

Day 1

13.50 - 14.00 - Opening Session

14.00 - 14.30 - Adpositions in Estonian Computational Syntax
	Kaili Müürisep, Kadri Muischnek and Tiina Puolakainen

14.30 - 15.00 - Prepositions and complement selection
	Jesse Tseng

15.00 - 15.30 - Preposition-Pronoun Contraction in Polish
	Beata Trawinski

15.30 - 16.00 - Coffee Break

16.00 - 16.30 - Prepositions as abstract relations
	Allan Ramsay

16.30 - 17.00 - Prepositions and event participants
	Boban Arsenijevic

17.00 - 17.30 - The polysemy of ''from'' within the barrier verb construction
	Christopher Phipps

Day 2

09.00 - 09.30 - Minor prepositions in nominal projections
	Frank Van Eynde

09.30 - 10.00 - A Minimal Recursion Semantics Analysis of Locatives
	Fredrik Jørgensen and Jan Tore Lønning

10.00 - 10.30 - Classification of Prepositional Senses for Deep Grammar Applications
	Lars Hellan and Dorothee Beermann

10.30 - 11.00 - Coffee Break

11.00 - 11.30 - Spatial and temporal arguments of the preposition ''uz'' in Serbian
	Tijana Asic

11.30 - 12.00 - Meaning of Japanese Spatial Nouns
	Tokunaga Takenobu, Koyama Tomofumi and Saito Suguru

12.00 - 12.30 - B3D - A System for the Description and Calculation of Spatial
Prepositions
	Thorsten Reichelt and Etienne Verleih

12.30 - 14.00 - Lunch

14.00 - 15.00 - Invited Speaker - Paola Merlo - TBA

15.00 - 15.30 - Towards More Accurate PP Attachment even with Simple Algorithms
	Brian Mitchell

15.30 - 16.00 - Coffee Break

16.00 - 16.30 - Cognitive Representations of Projective Prepositions
	John Kelleher and Fintan Costello

16.30 - 17.00 - A context-dependent model of proximity in physically situated
environments
	Geert-Jan M. Kruijff and John Kelleher

17.00 - 17.30 Business Meeting

Workshop Dinner

Day 3

09.00 - 09.30 - Concept-Based Meaning Representation of Prepositions
	Steffen Leo Hansen

09.30 - 10.00 -Reasoning with Prepositions within a Cooperative
Question-Answering Framework
	Farah Benamara

10.00 - 10.30 - Sense Disambiguation for Preposition 'with'
	Chutima Boonthum,  Shunichi Toida and Irwin Levinstein

10.30 - 11.00 - Coffee Break

11.00 - 11.30 - An overview of PrepNet: abstract notions, frames and inferential
patterns
	Patrick Saint-Dizier

11.30 - 12.00 - The Preposition Project
	Kenneth C. Litkowski and Orin Hargraves

12.00 - 13.30 - Lunch

13.30 - 14.00 - Looking for Prepositional Verbs in Corpus Data
	Timothy Baldwin

14.00 - 14.30 - The Extraction of Determinerless PPs
	Leonoor van der Beek

14.30 - 15.00 - Classifying Verb Particle Constructions by Verb Arguments
	Jon Patrick and Jeremy Fletcher

15.00 - 15.30 - Coffee Break

15.30 - 16.00 - Teaching a robot spatial expressions
	Simon Dobnik, Paul Newman, Stephen Pulman and Alastair Harrison

16.00 - 16.30 - An empirical testing of Levelt's (1984/1996) Principle of
Canonical Orientation
	Emile van der Zee

16.30 - 17.00 - Closing Session

CONTACT

For inquiries, please e-mail prep05 at essex.ac.uk .

Looking forward to welcoming you at Essex in April.

Aline Villavicencio (University of Essex, UK) - Workshop Chair
Valia Kordoni (Saarland University, Germany)





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