Fwd: Research Positions in Dialogue at Universit=?iso-8859-1?Q?=E9_?=Paris-Diderot (Paris 7),
Arnold, Doug
doug at ESSEX.AC.UK
Tue Dec 17 10:27:13 UTC 2013
Dear Colleagues,
With apologies for cross-posting, if you are interested, please reply to Jonathan Ginzburg (yonatan.ginzburg at univ-paris-diderot.fr).
Best
Doug
> Research Positions in the Semantics/Pragmatics of Dialogue
> at Université Paris-Diderot (Paris 7), FRANCE
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> The French-German (ANR/DFG) project Disfluencies, Exclamations, and Laughter in Dialogue (DUEL), joint between Université Paris-Diderot (PI: Jonathan Ginzburg) and the University of Bielefeld (PI: David Schlangen) are recruiting a researcher for a postdoctoral position in the Semantics/Pragmatics of Dialogue to be held at the Université Paris-Diderot (Paris 7). A PhD post at Paris associated with the project might also become available, subject to funding/selection (see below for details.).
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> The project will involve collaborations with members of the Laboratoire de Linguistique Formelle (LLF, http://www.llf.cnrs.fr ) at Paris-Diderot (Paris 7, www.univ-paris-diderot.fr/), with the Laboratory of Excellence LabEx-EFL (http://www.labex-efl.org/?q=en), and with members of the Dialogue Systems Group at Bielefeld University ( http://www.dsg-bielefeld.de ).
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> Over recent years much evidence has accumulated that disfluencies, far from being meaningless noise, contain much useful information that guides language users' actions and evaluations of their interlocuters' states of mind. Moreover, they exhibit rule-like regularities on all levels (including phonology, syntax, and semantics.). In DUEL we aim to show how disfluent speech across a number of languages (including French, German, English, and Chinese) can be analyzed in a precise way on the basis of formal grammatical tools, using this theory to guide the design of dialogue systems which can deal head on with disfluent speech, exploiting the information therein rather than filtering it away. DUEL will also tackle another phenomenon that has not hitherto received attention from formal grammarians, namely laughter. Our aim is to develop precise analyses of how laughter is integrated in the emergence of meaning, precise enough to enable dialogue systems that understand and respond to laughter to be implemented. The tools developed in DUEL to analyze disfluency and laughter, formalized using the dialogue framework KoS, will enable a variety of other dialogical phenomena that have been somewhat marginal to be analyzed, e,g, exclamations, tag questions, and corrective particles such as `No'.
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> Paris is one of the world's greatest cities to visit and even more so to live and do research in. It hosts more than a dozen labs in the cognitive and language sciences and is within easy train/plane ride to the rest of Europe.
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> Requirements for post-doctoral position:
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> - Ph.D. (or completed by April 2014) in Formal Semantics, Natural Language Processing, Computational Linguistics
> - Strong publication record
> - Programming skills will be highly advantageous
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> starting date: 1 April 2014
> Duration: 36 months
> Application deadline: January 15, 2014
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> Interested candidates should send their CV and the names and contact information of 3 referees to Jonathan Ginzburg (yonatan.ginzburg at univ-paris-diderot.fr).
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> PhD position:
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> Candidates interested in a PhD position, which would start in September 2014, should note that this involves an application process via the Language Sciences Graduate School of Université Paris-Diderot in May-June 2014. More details from Jonathan Ginzburg (yonatan.ginzburg at univ-paris-diderot.fr).
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