10.1485, Calls: General Linguistics, Lexical Functional Grammar
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Fri Oct 8 17:45:41 UTC 1999
LINGUIST List: Vol-10-1485. Fri Oct 8 1999. ISSN: 1068-4875.
Subject: 10.1485, Calls: General Linguistics, Lexical Functional Grammar
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=================================Directory=================================
1)
Date: Thu, 07 Oct 1999 09:13:12 -0700
From: bls at socrates.berkeley.edu
Subject: General Linguistics-Berkeley Linguistics Society
2)
Date: Fri, 8 Oct 1999 11:49:31 +1000 (AEST)
From: Rachel Nordlinger <r.nordlinger at linguistics.unimelb.edu.au>
Subject: LFG 2000 - INTERNATIONAL LEXICAL FUNCTIONAL GRAMMAR CONFERENCE
-------------------------------- Message 1 -------------------------------
Date: Thu, 07 Oct 1999 09:13:12 -0700
From: bls at socrates.berkeley.edu
Subject: General Linguistics-Berkeley Linguistics Society
Berkeley Linguistics Society 26
http://linguistics.berkeley.edu/BLS/BLS26CALL.html
CALL FOR PAPERS
February 18-21, 2000. University of California, Berkeley
General Session:
The General Session will cover all areas of general linguistic interest.
Invited Speakers
ELLEN PRINCE, University of Pennsylvania
MICHAEL TOMASELLO, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology
SHERMAN WILCOX, University of New Mexico
WALT WOLFRAM, North Carolina State University
Parasession: Aspect
The Parasession invites papers on aspectual systems and related
phenomena from various theoretical/formal, historical, cognitive,
functional, sociolinguistic, and typological perspectives, as well as
descriptive work and field reports.
Invited Speakers
BETH LEVIN, Stanford University
ANGELIKA KRATZER, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
MANFRED KRIFKA, University of Texas, Austin
Special Session: Syntax and Semantics of the Indigenous Languages of the
Americas
The Special Session will feature research on the indigenous languages of
the Americas. Papers addressing both synchronic and
diachronic issues are welcome.
Invited Speakers
EMMON BACH, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
MARIANNE MITHUN, University of California, Santa Barbara
JERRY SADOCK, University of Chicago
We encourage proposals from diverse theoretical frameworks and welcome
papers from related disciplines, such as Anthropology, Cognitive
Science, Computer Science, Literature, Philosophy, and Psychology.
Papers presented at the conference will be published in the Society's
Proceedings, and authors who present papers agree to provide
camera-ready copy (not to exceed 12 pages) by May 15, 2000.
Presentations will be allotted 20 minutes with an additional 10
minutes for questions.
We ask that you make your abstract as as specific as possible.
Include a statement of your topic or problem, your approach, and your
conclusions. Please send 10 copies of an anonymous one-page (8 1/2" x
11", unreduced) abstract. The reverse side of the page may be used
for data and references only.
Along with the abstract send a 3"x5" card listing:
#paper title;
#session (General, Parasession, or Special);
#for general session abstracts only, subfield, viz., Discourse Analysis,
Historical Linguistics, Morphology, Philosophy and
Methodology of Linguistics, Phonetics, Phonology, Pragmatics,
Psycholinguistics, Semantics, Sociolinguistics, or Syntax;
#name(s) of author(s);
#affiliation(s) of author(S);
#e-mail address to which notification of acceptance or rejection should
be sent;
#primary author's office and home phone numbers;
#primary author's e-mail address, if available.
An author may submit at most one single and one joint abstract. In case of
joint authorship, one address should be designated for communication with BLS.
Please send abstracts to:
BLS 26 Abstracts Committee
1203 Dwinelle Hall
University of California, Berkeley
CA 94720-2650.
Abstracts must be received by 4:00 p.m., October 29, 1999. We may be
contacted by e-mail at bls at socrates.berkeley.edu. We will not accept
faxed abstracts.
We strongly encourage submission by e-mail. Please use the subject
header "Abstract", and include all the author information in the body
of the e-mail. Electronic submissions may be sent to
bls-abs at trill.linguistics.berkeley.edu.
Plain text abstracts should be sent in the body of the e-mail, following
the author information. Acceptable formats are (in a descending
order of preference):
1. Adobe PDF;
2. Microsoft Word;
3. Microsoft RTF;
4. Plain text
Abstracts in formats other than plain text should be sent as an
attachment to your e-mail. PDF and PostScript files should have all
fonts embedded. Wirh the exception of SIL IPA fonts, please include
any non-standard fonts that you use (including all non-SIL IPA
phonetic and mathematical fonts). If you send your abstract in any
format other than plain text, please allow for time to solve any
technical difficulties that may arise.
Acknowledgment of receipt will be via e-mail. If you cannot use
e-mail, please make note of this and provide us with your postal
address.
Notification of acceptance will be sent via e-mail by November 20, 1999.
Registration Fees: Before February 5, 2000; $15 for students, $30 for
non-students; After February 5, 2000; $20 for students, $35 for
non-students.
-------------------------------- Message 2 -------------------------------
Date: Fri, 8 Oct 1999 11:49:31 +1000 (AEST)
From: Rachel Nordlinger <r.nordlinger at linguistics.unimelb.edu.au>
Subject: LFG 2000 - INTERNATIONAL LEXICAL FUNCTIONAL GRAMMAR CONFERENCE
FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS
LFG2000
2000 INTERNATIONAL LEXICAL FUNCTIONAL
GRAMMAR CONFERENCE
19 July - 20 July 2000
The University of California at Berkeley
as part of the BERKELEY FORMAL GRAMMAR CONFERENCE 2000
URL: http://linguistics.berkeley.edu/~bfg2000/
Submission receipt deadline: 15 February 2000
Submissions should be sent to the LFG Program Committee
(see addresses below)
The 5th International Lexical Functional Grammar Conference will be
held as a part of the Berkeley Formal Grammar Conference 2000 at the
University of California, Berkeley from July 19-23 2000. The Berkeley
event will consist of LFG2000 (July 19-20), HPSG2000 (July 22-23) and
a common day of workshops between them (July 21), entitled Lexical and
Constructional Explanations in Constraint-Based Grammar. This event
will offer a rare opportunity for interaction among researchers of the
two frameworks.
LFG2000 welcomes work both within the formal architecture of
Lexical-Functional Grammar and typological, formal, and computational
work within the 'spirit of LFG', as a lexicalist approach to language
employing a parallel, constraint-based framework. The conference aims
to promote interaction and collaboration among researchers interested
in nonderivational approaches to grammar, where grammar is seen as the
interaction of constraints from multiple levels, including category
information, grammatical relations, and semantic information. Further
information about the syntactic theory LFG can be obtained from:
http://clwww.essex.ac.uk/LFG/
SUBMISSIONS
The conference will primarily involve 30-minute talks, and possibly a
workshop. Talks will focus on results from completed as well as
ongoing research, with an emphasis on novel approaches, methods,
ideas, and perspectives, whether descriptive, theoretical, formal or
computational. Presentations should describe original, unpublished
work.
Abstracts and papers must be received by February 15, 1999, and should
be submitted to the program committee chairs at the address given
below. For further information or offers of organisational help,
contact the local organisers at the address below.
WORKSHOPS
Workshops are a small group of talks (2-4) on a coherent topic that
can be expected to generate opposing views and discussion with the
broader audience. Participants to workshops are usually
invited. Workshop papers should be distributed in advance among
participants and participants should refer to each others approaches.
Past LFG Conferences have included two or three workshops. Since
LFG2000 is shorter than usual, and there is a common day of workshops
between LFG2000 and HPSG2000 on July 21, we may not have any workshops
specific to LFG2000. However, at this point in time, we welcome
suggestions for workshops from potential organisers or people with
certain interests. Suggestions for workshops specific to LFG2000
should be sent to the program committee:
r.nordlinger at linguistics.unimelb.edu.au and manning at csli.stanford.edu.
Suggestions for workshops for the common day on Lexical and
Constructional Explanations in Constraint-Based Grammar should be sent
to the local organizers at bfg2000 at linguistics.berkeley.edu.
TIMETABLE
Deadline for receipt of submissions: 15 February 1999
Acceptances sent out: 31 March 1999
Conference: 19 July - 20
July 1999
SUBMISSION SPECIFICATIONS
People may submit either abstracts or full length papers for
refereeing. The advantages of full paper submission are that it allows
better assessment of your work and that (at least for some people)
accepted refereed full papers count as a higher status publication.
Full length papers. Papers should be no more than 15 pages, including
figures and references, in 11 or 12pt type, on A4/US Letter paper. The
printed text area must not exceed 165x230mm (6.5x9 inches), and should
be centred horizontally and vertically on the page. Omit name and
affiliation, and obvious self reference from the version for
review. Papers should include a roughly 100-200 word abstract at the
beginning.
Abstracts. Abstracts should be one A4 page in 10pt or larger type and
include a title. Omit name and affiliation, and obvious self
reference. A second page may be used for data, c-/f- and related
structures, and references.
Papers/abstracts may be submitted by email or by regular mail (or by
both means as a safety measure). Email submission is preferred.
Regular Mail
Include:
- Five copies of the abstract/paper.
- A card or cover sheet with the paper title, name(s) of the
author(s), affiliation, address, phone/fax number, e-mail address, and
whether the author(s) are students.
Email.
Include the paper title, name(s) of the author(s), address, phone/fax
number, email address, and whether the author(s) are students in the
body of your email message. Include or preferably attach your paper
as either a plain ASCII text, PDF, HTML, or postscript file.
Postscript files require special care to avoid problems: make sure the
system is set to include all fonts or at least all but the standard
13; if using a recent version of Word, make sure you click the printer
Properties button and then the Postscript tab, and there choose
Optimize for Portability; on all platforms make sure the system is not
asking for a particular paper size or other device-specific
configuration. It is your responsibility to send us a file that us
and our reviewers can print. You can often test this by trying to
look at the file in a previewer.
All papers/abstracts will be reviewed by at least two people.
Papers will appear in the proceedings which will be published online
by CSLI Publications. Selected papers may also appear in a printed
volume published by CSLI Publications.
ORGANISERS AND THEIR CONTACT ADDRESSES
Send paper/abstract submissions and inquiries about submissions to:
Program Committee Chairs:
Chris Manning <manning at csli.stanford.edu>
Rachel Nordlinger <r.nordlinger at linguistics.unimelb.edu.au>
Mail:
LFG2000
c/- Chris Manning
Linguistics Department
Stanford University
Stanford, CA 94305-2150
USA
Contact the local conference organisers at: bfg2000 at linguistics.berkeley.edu
ALL OTHER INFORMATION including accommodation and registration details
will be included in a subsequent call for papers. Following recent LFG
tradition, it is our hope that there will be an outdoorsy social event
prior to the beginning of LFG2000 --- watch this space for further
information.
**************************************************************************
Dr. Rachel Nordlinger
Dept. of Linguistics and Applied Linguistics
University of Melbourne
Victoria 3010
AUSTRALIA
ph. +61-(0)3-9344-4215, fax. +61-(0)3-9344-8990
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