[HPSG-L] Special issue of LiLT on Grammar Engineering

Emily M. Bender ebender at u.washington.edu
Fri Jun 19 20:08:09 UTC 2015


*Call for Papers (Special Issue)*
*Linguistic Issues in Language Technology  (LiLT) *
*Grammar Engineering: Precision Grammars*


Precision grammars are encodings of linguistic knowledge in a
representation that is both interpretable by humans and and usable in
parsers and sentence generators, which aim to handle rare constructions as
well as the more common ones.

LiLT solicits papers for a special issue on precision grammars, with a
particular interest in the following topics:

* Mixed or hybrid models of statistical and precision grammars
* Gradient grammaticality in precision grammars
* The use of machine learning and treebanks in creating precision grammars
* Parsing evaluation metrics that focus on evaluating the coverage of rare
phenomena
* Applications that show the importance/advantages of precision grammars;
* Handling of cross linguistic generalizations and typological information
in multi-lingual projects
* Precision grammar projects on less-studied languages

The deadline for submissions is: October 31, 2015
Submissions should be sent to
azaenen at stanford.edu

There is no special format required for submissions but accepted papers
need to be submitted in LATEX.

The editorial board for this issue is consists of Doug Arnold (University
of Essex), Emily Bender (University of Washington), Philippe Blache
(Université Aix-Marseille), Gerlof Bouma (University of Gothenburg) , Gosse
Bouma (University of Groningen), Miriam Butt (University of Konstanz),
 Eric De La Clergerie (INRIA), Dan Flickinger (Stanford University), Jan
Hajič (Charles University), Julia Hockenmaier (University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign), Ron Kaplan (Nuance), Tracy Holloway King (Ebay), Lori
Levin (Carnegie Mellon University), Detmar Meurers (University of
Tübingen), Joakim Nivre (Uppsala University), Aarne Ranta (Chalmers
University), Stephan Oepen (University of Oslo), Adam Przepiórkowski
(Polish Academy of Sciences), Laura Rimell (Cambridge University), Victoria
Rosén (University of Bergen), Louisa Sadler (University of Essex), Mark
Steedman (Edinburgh University), Gertjan van Noord (University of
Groningen), Annie Zaenen (Stanford University).



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