10.1999, Calls: Indonesian Ling, Semantic Approximation

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LINGUIST List:  Vol-10-1999. Wed Dec 22 1999. ISSN: 1068-4875.

Subject: 10.1999, Calls: Indonesian Ling, Semantic Approximation

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=================================Directory=================================

1)
Date:  Wed, 22 Dec 1999 20:44:58 +0700
From:  David Gil <gil at eva.mpg.de>
Subject:  Symposium on Malay / Indonesian Linguistics

2)
Date:  Wed, 22 Dec 1999 09:28:24 -0500 (EST)
From:  "Leo Obrst" <lobrst at vertical.net>
Subject:  KR-2000 Workshop on Semantic Approximation, Granularity, & Vagueness

-------------------------------- Message 1 -------------------------------

Date:  Wed, 22 Dec 1999 20:44:58 +0700
From:  David Gil <gil at eva.mpg.de>
Subject:  Symposium on Malay / Indonesian Linguistics

PKBB, Universitas Katolik Indonesia Atma Jaya, Jakarta
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig
University of Delaware, Newark
Association for Linguistic Typology

Call for Abstracts

The Fourth International
SYMPOSIUM ON MALAY / INDONESIAN LINGUISTICS

26 - 27 July 2000
Jakarta, Indonesia

###

Persons wishing to present a paper at the symposium are
invited to submit a one-page abstract, by regular mail,
email, or fax, to David Gil, at any of the following
addresses:

Department of Linguistics,
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology,
Inselstrasse 22, D-04103 Leipzig, Germany

email:  gil at eva.mpg.de 	
fax:  49-341-9952119

Deadline for submission of abstracts:  15 April 2000

###

Early submission procedure:

Abstracts may be submitted right away, or at any time before
the 15 April deadline.

Persons submitting their abstracts early will be notified
immediately whether their paper has been accepted for
presentation at the symposium, and, in case of acceptance,
will immediately be sent an official letter of invitation.
(The early submission procedure is designed to make it easier
for some participants to apply for funding and leave.)

###

Papers to be presented at the symposium should be concerned
with the Malay / Indonesian language in any of its varieties.
In addition to the standardized versions of Bahasa Melayu
and Bahasa Indonesia, papers are particularly welcome dealing
with non-canonical varieties such as Betawi Malay,
Jakarta Indonesian, Peranakan Malay, Bazaar Malay,
and regional dialects of Malay and Indonesian.
Papers may be in any of the subfields of linguistics, and may
represent variegated approaches and diverse theoretical
persuasions.  Presentations at the symposium will be delivered
in English.

###

Co-organizers:

Bambang Kaswanti Purwo
Universitas Katolik Indonesia Atma Jaya

Peter Cole
University of Delaware

David Gil
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology	

Uri Tadmor
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology

###

The Symposium is being held immediately after the
PELBBA conference, 24 - 25 July 2000, also at
Universitas Katolik Indonesia Atma Jaya.
For information regarding PELBBA please contact
Bambang Kaswanti Purwo, bkaswanti at fkip.atmajaya.ac.id.


-------------------------------- Message 2 -------------------------------

Date:  Wed, 22 Dec 1999 09:28:24 -0500 (EST)
From:  "Leo Obrst" <lobrst at vertical.net>
Subject:  KR-2000 Workshop on Semantic Approximation, Granularity, & Vagueness

                          Second call for papers

	 	*** Workshop on Semantic Approximation, Granularity, and Vagueness ***
	
	                      April 11, 2000
	
	     A Workshop of the Seventh International Conference on
	      Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning
	                       April 12-16
	                Breckenridge, Colorado, USA
	http://www.citizen.infi.net/~ledragon/KR2000sem_approx_workshop.html
	
	DESCRIPTION
	It has been recognized in recent years that similar issues, problems, and
	approaches underlie research on semantic approximation, partiality,
	granularity (abstraction, precisification), and vagueness in four fields:
	
	- knowledge representation in artificial intelligence (formalization of
	context, spatial and temporal knowledge bases)
	- formal modeling (including denotational semantics, finite model theory and
	descriptive complexity) in computer science
	- formal ontology in analytical philosophy
	- formal semantics and pragmatics in natural language (discourse
	interpretation, semantics of plurals, tense, aspect,
	underspecification,etc.)
	
	Some commonalities include the use of modal, temporal, and higher-order
	logics and possible worlds semantics for characterizing the dynamic
	interpretation of context, the employment of mereological and topological
	methods for modeling concepts and domains, theories of semantic abstraction
	and precisification, domain modeling using structured formal constructs such
	as partially ordered sets, lattices, boolean algebras, categories, topoi,
	etc.
	
	It might also be said that the notion of similarity requires a notion of
	semantic approximation, that one gauge of semantic approximation is location
	on a scale from more precise (or concrete or specific) to less precise (or
	abstract or general), but that such a gauge is inherently multidimensional.
	
	In addition, the notion of a boundary region between conceptually
	approximate objects may have to be explicated: How does one know that A is
	approximately but not quite B? How does one determine with increasing
	confidence an object to be in the extension of one predicate rather than
	another, for example, that an object is tall or is red? How should we
	interpret the formal constructs we use to characterize these notions of
	approximation, granularity, and abstraction, i.e., linguistically (as
	technical vocabulary only) or ontologically (the formal objects have real
	existence), and what are the implications of how we interpret these?
	This workshop intends to bring together researchers in the computer science,
	artificial intelligence, linguistics, and philosophy communities for the
	exchange of ideas and approaches to address issues they may have in common,
	such as:
	
	- Approximation, Partiality, Indefiniteness, and Vagueness
	- Similarity, Commonality, Accessibility
	- Abstraction and Precision: Notions of Semantic/Pragmatic Granularity
	- Dynamic Interpretation and Incremental Meaning
	- Formal Structures for Domain Models of Approximation
	- Imprecise Ontologies
	- Computational Implementations and Applications
	
	Potential applications where the ideas of this workshop can be utilized
	include information integration on the web, knowledge management,
	multi-agent systems, software component composition, text summarization, and
	natural language understanding.
	
	ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
	Leo Obrst, Ontologies Group, VerticalNet, Horsham, PA, USA
	(lobrst at vertical.net)
	
	Inderjeet Mani, Artificial Intelligence Center, The MITRE Corporation,
	McLean, Virginia, USA (imani at mitre.org)
	
	Paolo Bouquet, Mechanized Reasoning Group, Department of Computer and
	Management Sciences, University of Trento, Trento, Italy
	
	Pat Hayes, Institute for Human and Machine Cognition, University of West
	Florida, Pensacola, Florida, USA
	
	Aris M. Ouksel, College of Business Administration, The University of
	Illinois at Chicago, Illinois, USA
	
	Maarten de Rijke, Institute for Logic, Language, and Computation, University
	of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
	
	PROGRAM COMMITTEE
	Gérard Becher, GREYC, Université de Caen, Caen, France
	
	Massimo Benerecetti, Department of Computer and Management Sciences,
	University of Trento, and IRST, Trento, Italy
	
	Brandon Bennett, Division of Artificial Intelligence, School of Computer
	Studies University of Leeds, Leeds, UK
	
	Patrick Cousot, Département de Mathématiques et Informatique (DMI), École
	Normale Supérieure (ENS), Paris, France
	
	Chiara Ghidini, Department of Computing and Mathematics, Manchester
	Metropolitan University, Manchester, UK
	
	Angelo Montanari, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, University
	of Udine, Udine, Italy
	
	Manfred Pinkal, Department of Computational Linguistics, Univ. of
	Saarbruecken, Saarbruecken, Germany
	
	Paul Porter, Department of Linguistics, Georgetown University, Washington,
	DC, USA
	
	James Pustejovsky, Department of Computer Science and Volen Center for
	Complex Systems, Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts, USA
	
	Barry Smith, Department of Philosophy, University of New York at Buffalo,
	Buffalo, New York, USA
	
	Achille C. Varzi, Department of Philosophy, Columbia University, USA
	Henk Verkuyl, Utrecht Institute for Linguistics OTS, University of Utrecht,
	Utrecht, The Netherlands
	
	PAPER SUBMISSION
	Authors should submit papers on one of the topics addressed by the workshop
	or a related topic, with a maximum length of 10 pages (excluding
	references). Papers should be submitted electronically (in postscript
	format) to KRSemApp at citizen.infi.net  no later than January 15, 2000. Author
	names, affiliations, and primary author contact information should accompany
	the submission. Queries should be sent to KRSemApp at citizen.infi.net also.
	
	IMPORTANT DATES
	January 15, 2000 Submission deadline
	February 15, 2000 Notification of acceptance
	March 8, 2000 Camera-ready copy due
	April 11, 2000 Workshop
	______________________________
	Dr. Leo Obrst, Director of Ontologies
	VerticalNet, 700 Dresher Rd., Suite 100, Horsham, PA 19044
	Phone: 215-315-3558  Fax: 215-784-1965  Cell: 215-353-7385
	Email: lobrst at vertical.net
	

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