BFG2000-Prefinal program

Andreas Kathol kathol at socrates.berkeley.edu
Wed Jul 5 21:03:43 UTC 2000


	       BERKELEY FORMAL GRAMMAR CONFERENCE 2000

			   PREFINAL PROGRAM


			19 July - 23 July 2000
			  370 Dwinelle Hall
			     UC Berkeley
	       http://linguistics.berkeley.edu/~bfg2000


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Tuesday July 18, 2000
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9:00am-late afternoon
	Pre-conference picnic and hike in Tilden Park


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	      2000 LEXICAL FUNCTIONAL GRAMMAR CONFERENCE
	       http://www-lfg.stanford.edu/lfg/lfg2000/

			19 July - 20 July 2000

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Wednesday July 19, 2000
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8:00 REGISTRATION OPENS

8:50-9:00 Opening remarks
	Larry Hyman, Chair, Department of Linguistics, UC Berkeley
9:00-9:40
	Joan Bresnan, Stanford University and
	John Mugane, Ohio University
	Mixed categories in Gikuyu
9:40-10:20
	Yukiko Morimoto, Stanford University
	Lexical Projection of functional features: the view from Bantu
	relatives

10:20-10:40 BREAK

10:40-11:20
	Mark Johnson, Brown University
	Stochastic lexical-functional grammar
11:20-12:00
	Anette Frank, Xerox Research Centre Europe;
	Louisa Sadler, University of Essex;
	Josef van Genabith, City College Dublin; and
	Andy Way, Dublin City University
	Automatic F-structure annotation of treebank trees and CFGs
	extracted from treebanks

12:00-1:30 LUNCH

1:30-2:10
	Peter Sells, Stanford University
	Negation in Swedish: where it's not at
2:10-2:50
	George Aaron Broadwell, SUNY Albany
	The emergence of the unmarked in Mayan word order
2.50-3.30
	Hanjung Lee, Stanford University
	Word order and ambiguity in an extended model of optimization

3:30-3:50 BREAK

3:50-4:30
	Veit Reuer, Humboldt University Berlin
	Error-recognition and parsing of syntactically
	mildly ill-formed natural language
4:30-5:10
	Jonas Kuhn, University of Stuttgart
	Faithfulness violations and bidirectional optimization
5:10-5:50
	Ash Asudeh, Stanford University
	Functional identity and resource sensitivity in control

5:50-6:00 BREAK

6:00-7:00 ILFGA Annual General Meeting

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Thursday July 20, 2000
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8:00 REGISTRATION OPENS

9:00-9:40
	Mary Dalrymple and
	Tracy King, Xerox PARC
	Missing-object constructions: lexical and constructional
	variation

9:40-10:20
	Chris Culy, University of Iowa
	An incorporated object marker in Takelma

10:20-10:40 BREAK

10:40-11:20
	Yehuda Falk, Hebrew University
	Pivots and the theory of grammatical functions
11:20-12:00
	Mary Dalrymple, Xerox PARC and
	Helge Lodrup, University of Bergen
	The grammatical functions of complement clauses

12:00-1:30 LUNCH

1:30-2:10
	Nigel Vincent and
	Kersti Borjars, University of Manchester
	Feature resolution and the content of features
2:10-2:50
	Miriam Butt, University of Konstanz
	A re-examination of the accusative to ergative
	shift in Indo-Aryan

2:50-3:10 BREAK

3:10-6:00 Workshop
	"Morphosyntax in LFG"

	Workshop Organizers:
	Louisa Sadler, University of Essex
	Andrew Spencer, University of Essex

	Contributors:
	Farrell Ackerman, Kersti Borjars, Anette Frank, John
	Payne, Louisa Sadler, and Andrew Spencer

Alternates

	Julia Barron, University of Surrey
	Tense and agreement morphology -- the irrelevance of
	finiteness

	Tibor Laczko, Lajos Kossuth University
	On oblique arguments and adjuncts of Hungarian event
	nominals - a comprehensive LFG account

 	Rachel Nordlinger, University of Sydney and
	Louisa Sadler, University of Essex
	Tense as a nominal category


			   *  *  *  *  *  *


 LEXICAL AND CONSTRUCTIONAL EXPLANATIONS IN CONSTRAINT-BASED GRAMMARS
	http://linguistics.berkeley.edu/~bfg2000/schedule.html

			     21 July 2000

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Friday  July 21, 2000
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8:00 REGISTRATION OPENS

9:00-12:00 Workshop
	"Argument/Adjunct Dichotomy: Lexical and Constructional
	Approaches"

	Workshop Organizers:
	Tracy Holloway King, Xerox PARC
	Adam Przepiorkowski, Ohio State University

	Contributors:

		Paul Kay, UC Berkeley
		Argument and Adjunct Constructions

		Jane Simpson, University of Sydney
		TBA

		Ivan A. Sag, Stanford University
		Some Common Features of Complements and Adjuncts

		Peter Sells, Stanford University
		Commentary

12:00-1:30 LUNCH

1:30-3:30 Workshop
	"New Paradigms in Grammar Learning and Constraint-Based
	Theories"

	Workshop Organizers:
	Farrell Ackerman, UC San Diego
	Gert Webelhuth, University of NC, Chapel Hill

	Contributors:

		Peter Culicover, Ohio State University
		TBA

		Katherine Demuth, Brown University
		TBA

3:30-4:00 BREAK

4:00-7:00 Workshop
	"Approaches to Mismatch"
	
	Workshop Organizers:
	Elaine Francis, University of Hong Kong
	Laura Michaelis, CU Boulder

	Contributors:

		Rob Malouf, University of Groningen
		Cooperating constructions

		Jerrold Sadock, University of Chicago
		Multimodular Grammar

		Alex Alsina, Universitat Pompeu Fabra
		Complex predicates: A variety of mismatches

		Farrell Ackerman, UC San Diego
		Complex Predicate Formation as Lexeme-Formation:
		A Morphological Perspective on Mismatches

		Henriette de Swart, University of Utrecht
		Tense, aspect and coercion in a cross-linguistic
		perspective

		Laura Michaelis, CU Boulder
		Coercion via Construction

7:00-11:00
Dinner and  Party  (Alumni House)


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			      HPSG-2000
		   7th International Conference on
		 Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar
	   http://hpsg.stanford.edu/hpsg2000/hpsg2000.html

			   22-23 July 2000

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Saturday, 22 July 2000		
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8:00 REGISTRATION OPENS

9:00-9:30
	Robert D. Levine, Ohio State University
	'Tough' complementation and the extraclausal propagation of
	argument descriptions
9:30-10:00
	Shuichi Yatabe, University of Tokyo
	The syntax and semantics of Left-node Raising in Japanese
10:00-10:30
	Erhard W. Hinrichs, University of Tuebingen and
	Tsuneko Nakazawa, University of Tokyo
	The Was-w construction in German: A case study in type-coercion

10:30-10:45 BREAK		

10:45--11:45 Invited Talk
	John Hawkins, University of Southern California
	Adjacency to heads in performance and grammars
11:45--12:15
	Emily Bender and
	Susanne Z. Riehemann, Stanford University
	Experience-based HPSG

12:15--2:15 LUNCH			

2:15--2:45
	Adam Przepiorkowski, Ohio State University
	ARG-ST on phrases headed by semantically vacuous words:
	Evidence from Polish
2:45--3:15
	Tania Avgustinova, Univesity of the Saarland
	Arguments, grammatical relations, and diathetic paradigm

3:15--3:30 BREAK			

3:30-4:30
	Michael Dukes, University of Canterbury and
	Stanford University
	The morphosyntax of Tongan 2P pronouns
4:00-4:30
	Berthold Crysmann, University of the Saarland
	On the placement and morphology of Udi subject agreement
4:30-5:00
	Nathan Vaillette, Ohio State University
	Hebrew relative clauses in HPSG

5:00-5:15 BREAK			

5:15--5:45
	Karin Golde, YY Software Corporation
	The rest of the binding theory
5:45--6:15
	Tibor Kiss, University of Bochum
	Anaphors aren't exempt in German: A slightly more
	configurational binding theory

6:15--7:00 Business Meeting

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Sunday, 23 July 2000
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8:00 REGISTRATION OPENS

9:00-9:30
	Anthony Davis, UC Santa Barbara and
	Jean-Pierre Koenig, SUNY Buffalo
	The key to lexical semantics
9:30-10:00
	Judith Tonhauser, University of Stuttgart
	An approach to polarity sensitivity and negative concord by
	lexical underspecification
10:00-10:30
	Valia Kordoni, University of Tuebingen
	Linking oblique complements

10:30-10:45 BREAK

10:45--11:45 Invited Talk
	Donna Gerdts, Simon Fraser University and
	Thomas Hukari, University of Victoria
	Halkomelem valence morphology:  A multi-level argument
	structure analysis
11:45--12:15
	Marianne Desmets, University Paris X and
	Laurent Roussarie, University Paris 7
	French reportive 'comme' clauses: A case of parenthetical
	adjunction

12:15--1:45 LUNCH

1:45--2:15
	Ivan A. Sag, Stanford University
	Rules and exceptions in the English auxiliary system
2:15--2:45
	Nuttanart Muansuwan, SUNY Buffalo and U. of Technology,
	Thonburi, Thailand
	Directional serial verb constructions in Thai
2:45--3:15
	Dave McKercher, Stanford University
	Switch-reference in Zuni

3:15--3:30 BREAK

3:30-4:15 Invited talk
	Lars Hellan and
	Torbjorn Nordgard,
	Norwegian University of Science and Technology
	Tutorial on Norwegian grammar: Challenges for HPSG
4:15--4:45
	Anne Abeille, University Paris 7 and
	Daniele Godard, University of Lille
	Varieties of ESSE in Romance languages
4:45--5:15
	Stefan Mueller, DFKI, Saarbrucken
	The passive as a lexical rule

5:15--5:30 BREAK

5:30-6:00
	Frank Van Eynde, University of Leuven
	Minor prepositions in Dutch
6:00-6:30
	Jong-Bok Kim, Kyung Hee University
	A constraint-based and head-driven analysis of multiple
	nominative constructions


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DIRECTIONS
(http://linguistics.berkeley.edu/~bfg2000/Directions.html)


HOW TO GET AROUND BERKELEY CAMPUS

The campus of UC Berkeley is located on the western slope of a hill,
so for the sake of convenience "up" on the following map ...

  http://linguistics.berkeley.edu/~bfg2000/campus.jpg

... is up the hill (east) and "down" is down the hill (west).  A very
important landmark of the Berkeley campus is the "Campanile" (also
known as "Sather Tower"), circled yellow on the map. The conference is
just downhill (and south) from it on South Drive.

HOW TO GET TO THE DORMS

The dorm spaces that have been reserved for many conference
participants are in the Unit 3 Residence Hall Complex, marked on the
map in blue. Unit 3 is located one block south of campus on 2400
Durant Ave. (east/uphill of Dana St.) (In case you arrive by car note
that both are one-way streets: Durant: west-east (uphill), Dana:
north-south.)

HOW TO GET TO THE CONFERENCE

The conference takes place in 370 Dwinelle Hall, a red cross marks the
spot on the map. 370 Dwinelle Hall is located on the TOP floor
of the building and is most easily reached via the main entrance on
the east/uphill side of the building through Dwinelle Plaza (indicated
by a red arrow). Upon entering Dwinelle, turn right. Toward the end of
the hallway there is an elevator on your left which you should take to
the top floor ("F" level). Alternatively use the stairs on your
right. Upon exiting from the elevator make a U-turn. Access to the
conference hall is through 371 Dwinelle, where registration,
booktables, etc. are located.

(Getting lost in Dwinelle Hall is virtually a mandatory part of the UC
Berkeley experience (so maybe I shouldn't spoil the fun ...). In order
to understand that building (if that is at all possible), you should
know that it actually consists of two separate units that happen to
share the same name and are physically connected to each other
somewhat tenuously.  There is first a classroom wing to the south (all
room numbers have two or three digits) and an office wing on the north
(all room numbers have four digits). (To keep things interesting, an
exception to this numbering rule is the conference room which has a
three-digit number but which is located in the office wing ...))



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