[Corpora-List] Extended deadline: "Discourse Expectations" Workshop in T=?iso-8859-1?Q?=FCbingen_?=(D), June 2013
Torgrim Solstad
torgrim.solstad at ntnu.no
Thu Feb 28 14:10:12 UTC 2013
DISCOURSE EXPECTATIONS: THEORETICAL, EXPERIMENTAL, AND COMPUTATIONAL
PERSPECTIVES
- Workshop at the University of Tübingen (Germany), June 20-21, 2013
*Deadline extended to March 10, 2013*
Apologies for multiple postings
Studies on discourse processing suggest that natural language
interpretation is expectation-driven. World knowledge and discourse
context are used immediately to anticipate how discourse is likely to
continue. Although there is ample evidence demonstrating such
forward-looking processes both within single sentences and in larger
discourse, we still lack a unified account of its foundation; i.e. the
extent to which linguistic and extralinguistic factors influence
expectations and whether these are driven by linguistic or
language-external factors. The workshop contributes to the understanding
of discourse expectations by bringing together linguists,
psycholinguists, cognitive scientists and computational linguists
working on discourse processing.
We encourage submissions of theoretical, experimental and computational
studies on the following aspects, and topics related to these:
- What is the nature of expectations in discourse? Do they pertain only
to discourse or anaphoric relations? How specific are expectations? Are
they abstract objects or particulars?
- How do expectations emerge? Are they triggered locally, e.g. by
lexical items, or are they determined globally by more general
properties of discourse, such as the discourse topic/Question under
Discussion (QuD)? How do local and global expectations interact?
The phenomenon of implicit causality may serve as a particularly
illustrative example: In psycholinguistic and linguistic research, it
has been shown that certain transitive verbs with two animate arguments
trigger expectations of explanations of a particular type. Thus, while
the experiencer-object verb "fascinate" triggers explanations about the
subject ("John fascinates Mary because HE..."), the experiencer-subject
verb "admire" triggers explanations about the object ("John admires Mary
because SHE..."). This phenomenon has been exploited in psycholinguistic
experiments to investigate the time course of semantic and/or pragmatic
interpretation, often with clear demonstrations of the emergence of
early effects in discourse comprehension that appear shortly after the
verb has been processed. However, further theoretically oriented
investigations may benefit our understanding of the nature of these
effects as well as their modeling.
INVITED SPEAKERS AND PRELIMINARY TALK TITLES
- Arnout W. Koornneef (Utrecht University): On predictive reading styles
and the use of implicit causality information in pronoun resolution
- Hannah Rohde (University of Edinburgh): What to do when a linguist
says she's expecting: Coherence and coreference expectations in sentence
processing
- Roger van Gompel (University of Dundee): Producing reference:
Psycholinguistic and computational perspectives
We plan to publish a selection of papers in a special issue of a journal.
VENUE AND IMPORTANT DATES
The workshop will take place at the University of Tübingen, Germany.
Extended submission deadline: March 10, 2013
Notification of acceptance: April 15, 2013
Workshop dates: June 20-21 (Thursday-Friday), 2013
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
We invite abstracts for 45 minute presentations (including discussion).
Abstracts should be submitted in PDF format, not exceeding two pages
(A4) with 1 in margins, including references, examples, data summaries
and charts. Authors and their affiliations should be omitted and
submitted on a separate sheet with the abstract title.
Abstracts should be submitted to the below address. Please, include the
first author's name in the subject line of your email. The title of the
abstract and the names of any co-authors should appear in the body of
the email.
detec2013 at gmail.com
WORKSHOP WEB PAGE
More information on the workshop will be made available continuously
under the following address:
http://detec2013.wordpress.com
PROGRAMME COMMITTEE
Nicholas Asher (CNRS & University Paul Sabatier, Toulouse)
Nadine Bade (University of Tübingen)
Berry Claus (Humboldt University Berlin)
Cathrine Fabricius-Hansen (University of Oslo)
Alan Garnham (University of Sussex)
Joshua Hartshorne (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Barbara Hemforth (University Paris Descartes)
Robin Hörnig (University of Tübingen)
Katja Jasinskaja (Zentrum für Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft, Berlin)
Elsi Kaiser (University of Southern California, Los Angeles)
Yuki Kamide (University of Dundee)
Hans Kamp (University of Texas, Austin/University of Stuttgart)
Elena Karagjosova (University of Stuttgart)
Barbara Kaup (University of Tübingen)
Arnout Koornneef (Utrecht University)
Detmar Meurers (University of Tübingen)
Arndt Riester (University of Stuttgart)
Hannah Rohde (University of Edinburgh)
Antje Rossdeutscher (University of Stuttgart)
Ted Sanders (Utrecht University)
Patrick Sturt (University of Edinburgh)
Roger van Gompel (University of Dundee)
Yannick Versley (University of Tübingen)
Henk Zeevat (University of Amsterdam)
WORKSHOP ORGANIZERS
Oliver Bott (SFB 833, University of Tübingen)
Juhani Järvikivi (University of Alberta/Norwegian University of Science
and Technology)
Anna Pryslopska (SFB 833, University of Tübingen)
Pirita Pyykkönen-Klauck (Norwegian University of Science and
Technology/Saarland University)
Torgrim Solstad (Norwegian University of Science and Technology)
FUNDING
This workshop is financially supported by the Collaborative Research
Centre (SFB) 833 "The construction of meaning - the dynamics and
adaptivity of linguistic structures" at the University of Tübingen.
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