23.4643, Confs: Computational Ling, Semantics/India
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LINGUIST List: Vol-23-4643. Tue Nov 06 2012. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.
Subject: 23.4643, Confs: Computational Ling, Semantics/India
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Date: Tue, 06 Nov 2012 11:08:06
From: Ronaldo Martins [r.martins at undlfoundation.org]
Subject: I UNL Panel
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I UNL Panel
Short Title: I UNL Panel
Date: 15-Dec-2012 - 15-Dec-2012
Location: Mumbai, India
Contact: Ronaldo Martins
Contact Email: r.martins at undlfoundation.org
Meeting URL: http://www.unlweb.net/panel
Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics; Semantics
Meeting Description:
I UNL Panel
http://www.unlweb.net/panel
December 15, 2012 - Mumbai, India
Associated event to COLING 2012
The UNL is an artificial language created to represent and process information across language barriers. Initially proposed by the Institute of Advanced Studies of the United Nations University, in Tokyo, Japan, in 1996, it has been enhanced and promoted by the UNDL Foundation, in Geneva, Switzerland, under a mandate of the United Nations, since 2000. The basic assumption of the UNL approach is that the information conveyed by natural languages can be formally represented through a semantic network made of three different types of discrete semantic units: Universal Words (UW's), relations and attributes. The UW's are the nodes in the graph, to be interlinked by relations and specified by attributes.
The main purpose of the UNL Panel is to collect the opinion of specialists, from inside and outside the UNL Community, about technical issues of UNL, in order to prepare the ground for an in-depth revision of the current UNL specifications. The I UNL Panel, an associated event to COLING 2012, is devoted to the nature and role of Universal Words (UW's), the nodes in the UNL semantic graph.
As the name indicates, Universal Words are expected to be 'universal'. This does not mean that they represent a sort of common lexical denominator to all languages or a semantic primitive. The concept of universality, in UNL, must be understood in terms of 'semantic accessibility', i.e, in the sense of 'capable of being used and understood by all' (as in 'universal adapter', 'universal screwdriver' or 'universal remote control'), and UW's depict concepts that may range from absolutely global to absolutely local, and even temporary. They are universal in the sense that they are uniform identifiers to the entities defined in the UNL Knowledge Base, which is expected to map everything that we know about the world, and that is used to assign translatability to any concept.
In order to take the best directions concerning the UW's, the UNDL Foundation will listen to 6 specialists about 5 topics of lexical semantics:
What is to be considered a 'Universal Word'?
Which named entities should be introduced in the dictionary of UW's, if any?
UW's must correspond to roots, to stems or to word forms?
Antonyms should be represented as a single UW or as different UW's?
When a multiword expression must be represented as a UW?
These topics will be discussed considering the five questions available at www.unlweb.net/wiki/I_UNL_Panel. They illustrate practical issues concerning UW's and have been receiving several different possible answers. The main goal of I UNL Panel is to discuss which answers would be more appropriate and feasible, considering the nature and role of the UNL, and the state of the art of the theory and technology on natural language processing.
Panelists:
Eric Wehrli (Université de Genève)
Igor Boguslavsky (Universidad Politécnica de Madrid/Institute for Information Transmission Problems, Russian Academy of Sciences)
Mike Dillinger (eBay)
Nicoletta Calzolari (Istituto di Linguistica Computazionale Antonio Zampolli, Pisa)
Pushpak Bhattacharyya (IIT-Bombay)
Sameh Alansary (University of Alexandria)
Chair:
Ronaldo Martins (UNDL Foundation)
Program:
Saturday, December 15, 2012
09:00-09:30 - Opening session
09:30-10:00 - General presentation of the questions
10:00-12:00 - Presentations of the panelists
12:00-14:00 - Lunch break
14:00-16:00 - Presentations of the panelists
16:00-17:30 - Discussion session
17:30-18:00 - Closing session
Venue:
Victor Menezes Convention Center - IIT Bombay
Further information:
Ronaldo Martins (r.martins at undlfoundation.org)
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