16.3602, FYI: ESSLLI 2006: List of Courses

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LINGUIST List: Vol-16-3602. Mon Dec 19 2005. ISSN: 1068 - 4875.

Subject: 16.3602, FYI: ESSLLI 2006: List of Courses

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1)
Date: 19-Dec-2005
From: Carlos Areces < Carlos.Areces at loria.fr >
Subject: ESSLLI 2006: List of Courses 

	
-------------------------Message 1 ---------------------------------- 
Date: Mon, 19 Dec 2005 00:36:20
From: Carlos Areces < Carlos.Areces at loria.fr >
Subject: ESSLLI 2006: List of Courses 
 

18th European Summer School in Logic, Language and Information
                                   ESSLLI 2006
                    31 July - 11 August, 2006, Malaga, Spain
                          http://esslli2006.lcc.uma.es

        
               LIST OF ACCEPTED COURSES AND PRELIMINARY PROGRAMM
               

        The European Summer School in Logic, Language and Information (ESSLLI)
        is organized every year by the Association for Logic, Language and
        Information (FoLLI, http://www.folli.org) in different sites around
        Europe.

        The main focus of ESSLLI is on the interface between linguistics,
        logic and computation.  ESSLLI offers foundational, introductory and
        advanced courses, as well as workshops, covering a wide variety of
        topics within the three areas of interest: Language and Computation,
        Language and Logic, and Logic and Computation.

        Previous summer schools have been highly successful, attracting up to
        500 students from Europe and elsewhere.  The school has developed into
        an important meeting place and forum for discussion for students and
        researchers interested in the interdisciplinary study of Logic,
        Language and Information.

        LIST OF ACCEPTED COURSES AND PRELIMINARY PROGRAM:

        Language and Computation:
        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

        Week 1

        * Resource-Scarce Language Engineering, by Edward Garrett (Workshop)
        * Introduction to Corpus Resources, Annotation and Access, by Sabine Schulte
          im Walde and Heike Zinsmeister (Foundational Course)
        * Introduction to Symbolic and Statistical NLP in Scheme, by Damir
          Cavar (Introductory Course)
        * Data-Driven Methods for Acquiring Linguistic Information, by Timothy
          Baldwin and Aline Villavicencio (Introductory Course)
        * An Empirical View on Semantic Roles Within and Across Languages, by
          Katrin Erk and Sebastian Pado (Introductory Course) 
        * Treebank-Based Acquisition of LFG, HPSG and CCG Resources, by Josef
          van Genabith, Julia Hockenmaier and Yusuke Miyao (Advanced
          Course)
        * Semantic Domains in Natural Language Processing, by Alfio 
          Gliozzo and Carlo Strapparava (Advanced Course)

        Week 2

        * Modelling Coherence for Generation and Dialogue Systems, by Rodger
          Kibble, Paul Piwek and Ielka van der Sluis (Workshop)
        * Computational Morphology, by Kemal Oflazer (Foundational Course)
        * Counting Words: An Introduction to Lexical Statistics, by Marco
          Baroni and Stefan Evert (Introductory Course)
        * Computational Semantics: Linking Language Processing to Applications,
          by Ann Copestake and Dan Flickinger (Introductory Course)
        * Word Sense Disambiguation, by Rada Mihalcea (Introductory Course)
        * Implementing Argument Alternations, by Miriam Butt and Tracy Holloway
          King (Advanced Course)
        * Argument Structure, by Markus Egg and Valia Kordoni (Advanced
          Course)
        * Probabilistic Methods in Computational Psycholinguistics, by Roger
          Levy (Advanced Course)
        * Machine Learning and Dialogue, by James Henderson and Oliver Lemon
          (Advanced Course)

          
        Logic and Computation:
        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

        Week 1

        * Proof Theory and Deep Inference, by Alessio Guglielmi (Foundational
          Course)
        * Introduction to Automated Reasoning, by Hans De Nivelle and
          Peter Baumgartner (Foundational Course)
        * Specifying and Proving in Maude, by Manuel Clavel and Narciso 
          Marti-Oliet (Introductory Course)
        * Modal Logics for Multi-Agent Systems, by Valentin Goranko and
          Wojciech Jamroga (Introductory Course)
        * Expressiveness of Temporal Logics, by François Laroussinie and 
          Nicolas Markey (Introductory Course)
        * The Modal Mu-Calculus, by Yde Venema (Introductory Course)
        * Logics for Quantum Information Flow, by Alexandru Baltag and Sonja 
          Smets (Advanced Course)
        * Approximate Reasoning for the Semantic Web, by Pascal Hitzler, Frank
          van Harmelen and Holger Wache (Advanced Course)
        * Coalgebras, Modal Logic, Stone Duality, by Alexander Kurz (Advanced
          Course)

        Week 2

        * Workshop on Logics for Resource Bounded Agents, by Natasha Alechina 
          and Thomas Ågotnes (Workshp)
        * Rationality and Knowledge, by Sergei Artemov and Rohit Parikh
          (Workshop)
        * Verification of Infinite State Systems, by Angelo Montanari and
          Gabriele Puppis (Introductory Course)
        * Proof Nets and the Identity of Proofs, by Lutz Strassburger
          (Introductory Course)
        * Semantics of Higher-Order Logic, by Chad Brown and Chris
          Benzmueller (Advanced Course)
        * Logical and Meta-Logical Frameworks, by Carsten Schuermann (Advanced
          Course)
        * Logic and Computation in Finitely Presentable Infinite Structures, by
          Valentin Goranko and Sasha Rubin (Advanced Course)


        Language and Logic:
        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

        Week 1

        * Formal Ontologies for Communicating Agents, by Roberta Ferrario 
          and Nicola Guarino (Workshop)
        * On Logic and Language, by Raffaella Bernardi and Patrick Blackburn
          (Foundational Course)
        * Natural Language Quantifiers, by Nouwen, Rick (Introductory Course)
        * Working with Discourse Representation Theory, by Patrick Blackburn
          and Johan Bos (Introductory Course)
        * Mereology for Linguists, by Christopher Piñón (Introductory Course)
        * From Syntactic Structures to Logical Semantics, by Christian Retoré and
          Alexandre Dikovsky (Advanced Course)
        * Temporal Anaphora in Tenseless Languages, by Maria Bittner (Advanced
          Course)
        * Linear Logic, Linguistic Resource Sensitivity and Resumption, by
          Ash Asudeh (Advanced Course)
                  
        Week 2

        * Ambiguity in Anaphora, by Ron Artstein and Massimo Poesio
          (Workshop)
        * Concord Phenomena and the Syntax Semantics Interface, by Paul Dekker
          and Hedde Zeijlstra (Workshop)
        * Parsing, by Eric de la Clergerie (Foundational Course)
        * Proofs, Evidence, Knowledge, by Sergei Artemov (Introductory Course)
        * Signalling Games and Pragmatics, by Anton Benz (Introductory Course)
        * Higher Order Grammar, by Carl Pollard (Introductory Course)
        * Anaphora resolution: Theory and Practice, by Annie Zaenen (Advanced
          Course)
        * Applications and Extensions of Dynamic Semantics, by Nicholas Asher
          (Advanced Course)


        PROGRAM COMMITTEE:

        Chair:
           Carlos Areces
           INRIA Lorraine. 615, rue du Jardin Botanique
           54602 Villers les Nancy Cedex, France
           phone  : +33 (0)3 83 58 17 90
           fax    : +33 (0)3 83 41 30 79
           e-mail : carlos.areces (at) loria.fr
           www    : http://www.loria.fr/~areces

        Local co-chair:
           Manuel Diaz

        Area Specialists:
           Larry Moss and Gerhard Jaeger (Logic and Language)
           Valeria de Paiva and Juan Jose Moreno Navarro (Logic and Computation)
           Philip Miller and Anette Frank (Language and Computation)

        ORGANIZING COMMITTEE:
           Ernesto Pimentel (chair)


        FURTHER INFORMATION: To obtain further information, visit the ESSLLI
        site at http://esslli2006.lcc.uma.es/.  For this year's summer school,
        please see the web site at http://www.macs.hw.ac.uk/esslli05. 



Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics





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