HPSG-2003 preliminary program
Borsley R D
rborsley at ESSEX.AC.UK
Fri Apr 25 06:20:46 UTC 2003
HPSG-2003
10th International Conference on
Head-Driven Phrase Structure Grammar
East Lansing, Michigan, USA
July 18-20, 2003
The 10th International Conference on HPSG will take place on 18-20 July
2003 at Michigan State University, East Lansing (held in conjunction with
the 2003 Linguistic Institute). The preliminary program is as follows:
Friday, July 18:
3.30 Welcome
3.35 Dan Flickinger (Stanford University) and Francis Bond (NTT
Communication Science Labs), A two-rule analysis of measure noun
phrases
4.10 John Beavers (Stanford University), More heads and less categories:
a new look at noun phrase structure
4.10 Frank Van Eynde (K.U.Leuven), On the notion `determiner'
5:20-5:35 break
5.35 Anne Abeille and Daniele Godard (Universite Paris 7), The syntactic
flexibility of adverbs: French degree adverbs
6.10 Robert Malouf (San Diego State University) A quantitative look at
mixed category constructions
Evening: all-institute party
Saturday, July 19:
9.00 Peter Sells (Stanford University), Negatives of imperatives
9.35 Luis Paris (University at Albany, SUNY) and Jean-Pierre Koenig
(University at Buffalo, SUNY), What does it mean to be a complement?
10.10 Incheol Choi and Stephen Wechsler (University of Texas at Austin),
The Korean dative
10.45-11.00 break
11.00 Gerald Penn and Kenneth Hoetmer (University of Toronto), In search
of epistemic primitives in the English Resource Grammar (or why HPSG
can't live without higher-order datatypes)
11.35 Andreas Kathol (University of California Berkeley), Cooperating
constructions in Lai "lexical insertion"
12.10 David Yoshikazu Oshima and Roger Levy (Stanford University),
Non-transitive information flow in Japanese noun-classifier matching
12.45-14.15 lunch break
14.15 Jean-Pierre Koenig (University at Buffalo, SUNY) and Anthony Davis
(Streamsage, Inc), Semantically transparent linking in HPSG
14.50 Jeffrey T. Runner (University of Rochester) and Raul Aranovich
(University of California Davis), Noun incorporation and rule
interaction in the lexicon
15.25 Stefan Mueller (DFKI Saarbrcken), Object-to-subject-raising and
lexical rule: an analysis of the German passive
16.00-16.15 break
16.15 Kei Yoshimoto and Masahiro Kobayashi (Tohoku University), Floating
quantifiers in Japanese as non-floating anaphora
16.50 Mohammad Haji-Abdolhosseini (University of Toronto), A
constraint-based approach to information structure and prosody
correspondence
17.25 Jeanette Gundel (University of Minnesota) Information structure:
how much belongs in the grammar?
Evening: no-host conference dinner
Sunday, July 20:
9.00 Robert D. Levine (Ohio State University) and Ivan A. Sag (Stanford
University), Some empirical issues in the grammar of extraction
9.35 Vanessa Metcalf (Ohio State University), A linearization account of
Spanish obligatory subject NP inversion
10.10 Florian Jaeger (Stanford University), Multiple wh-questions,
superiority, and clitic doubling in colloquial Bulgarian: A
construction-based HPSG account
10.45-11.00 break
11.00 Olivier Bonami (Universite Rennes 2) and Daniele Godard (Universite
Paris 7), Incidental adjuncts: an overlooked type of adjunction
11.35 Gosse Bouma (Rijskuniversiteit Groningen), Word order and scope of
adjuncts in Dutch
12.10 Anke Holler (University of Heidelberg and TEMIS Deutschland), An
HPSG analysis of the non-integrated wh-relative clauses in German
12.45-14.00 lunch break
14.00 business meeting
14.30 David Schlangen and Alex Lascarides (University of Edinburgh), A
compositional and constraint-based approach to non-sentential
utterances
15.05 Matthew Purver and Jonathan Ginzburg (King's College London),
Clarifying noun phrase semantics
15.40 Eun-Jung Yoo (Seoul National University), Specificational
pseudoclefts in English
16.15-16.30 break
16.30 Chan Chung (Dongseo University) and Jong-Bok Kim (Kyung Hee
University), English word order asymmetries in left-pheripheral
constructions
17.05 Kordula De Kuthy and Detmar Meurers (Ohio State University), The
secret life of focus exponents, and what it tells us about fronted
verbal projections
17.40 Michael K. Tanenhaus (University of Rochester) Interactions with
context in language comprehension: implications and challenges
18.40 end of conference
Questions on conference arrangements: Ivan Sag, sag at csli.Stanford.EDU
Website: http://hpsg.stanford.edu/2003
Prof. Robert D. Borsley
Department of Language and Linguistics
University of Essex
Wivenhoe Park
COLCHESTER CO4 3SQ, UK
rborsley at essex.ac.uk
tel: +44 1206 873762
fax: +44 1206 872198
http://privatewww.essex.ac.uk/~rborsley
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