11.1897, Calls: Language Technology, Hybrid Logics

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LINGUIST List:  Vol-11-1897. Sat Sep 9 2000. ISSN: 1068-4875.

Subject: 11.1897, Calls: Language Technology, Hybrid Logics

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

1)
Date:  Thu, 07 Sep 2000 16:56:02 -0400
From:  Amy Berdann <berdann at jhu.edu>
Subject:  Language Technology - JHU CLSP Workshop 2001

2)
Date:  Fri, 8 Sep 2000 19:09:03 +0200
From:  Carlos Areces <carlos at wins.uva.nl>
Subject:  Hybrid Logics (HyLo 2000)

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

Date:  Thu, 07 Sep 2000 16:56:02 -0400
From:  Amy Berdann <berdann at jhu.edu>
Subject:  Language Technology - JHU CLSP Workshop 2001


Dear Colleague:

I am writing in connection with the summer workshop on Language Technology
we are preparing to host at the Johns Hopkins University in the summer of
2001.

You may already have a good idea about the nature of these summer workshops,
which we have hosted every year at Hopkins since 1995.  If not, I have
included a short summary description.  If you need additional information,
please feel free to ask me or visit our web pages at
http://www.clsp.jhu.edu

These workshops have attempted to identify specific research topics
(suitable for a six week team exploration) on which progress is needed to
advance the state of the art in various fields of Language Technology (such
as ASR, text-to-speech, TDT, MT, information retrieval, summarization,
etc.).  The research topics of the participating teams in previous workshops
can serve as a good example (see below).  Having identified such topics in
an organizational conference (see below), we then attempt to get the best
researchers to work on them.  The purpose of this communication is to ask
you for help in identifying suitable topics.

Would you be interested and available to participate in the 2001 Summer
Workshop (July 9 - August 17, 2001)?  If so, we ask that you submit a
one-page research proposal for consideration.  It need only be a couple of
paragraphs detailing the problem and a rough agenda to be addressed by the
team in the 6-week period.  If your proposal is chosen (by an independent
review panel), we would invite you to join us for the Organizational
Conference at the Airlie Conference Center in Warrenton, Virginia, November
17-19, 2000 (as our guest), for further discussions aimed at consensus.  If,
at the organizational meeting, a topic in your area of interest is chosen as
one of the four to be pursued during the summer, we would expect you to be
available for participation (and perhaps team leadership) in the six week
workshop.  We are not asking for an ironclad commitment at this juncture,
just a good faith understanding that if a project in your area of interest
is chosen, you will take an active role in pursuing it.

We would like to receive proposals by September 29, 2000 so that we may
begin the review process.  They may be faxed (410-516-5050), sent via return
e-mail (berdann at jhu.edu) or via regular mail (CLSP, Johns Hopkins
University, 3400 N. Charles St., Barton 320, Baltimore, MD  21218).

Please let us know via return e-mail whether you are interested in
submitting a proposal.

Regards,

Frederick Jelinek, Director
Center for Language and Speech Processing
Johns Hopkins University



Information on Workshop 2001

The 6-week workshop at Johns Hopkins University on language engineering
brings together teams of leading professionals and students to advance the
state of the art.  The professionals would normally be university professors
and industrial and governmental researchers working in widely dispersed
locations.  The graduate students will be familiar with the field and will
be selected in accordance with their demonstrated performance.  The
undergraduates will be entering seniors who are new to the field and who
have shown outstanding academic promise.  They will be selected through a
national search.  Undergraduate participation began in 1998 with the intent
of  broadening the appeal of language engineering amongst students
considering graduate studies.

Proposals for research projects are being solicited from a wide range of
academic and government institutions, as well as from industry.  All
proposals will be reviewed by an independent panel.  Those chosen will be
presented at the Airlie conference to which both presenters and leading
researchers will be invited.  Out of these presentations and the discussion
which will follow, the four research topics for WS01 will emerge.

The primary goal of the workshop is to establish research directions and
educate students in language technology.  Additional expected benefits of
the workshop are the recruitment of students into language engineering
research; the creation, collection, and dissemination of tools and data for
language engineering research; and the establishment of fruitful and
long-lasting collaborations.

Workshop 2000 investigated four topics:  Pronunciation Modeling of Mandarin
Casual Speech, Mandarin English Information, Audio-Visual Speech Recognition
and Reading Comprehension.




      Amy Berdann                      410-516x4778
    Center Administrator                 berdann at jhu.edu
       320 Barton Hall                   http://www.clsp.jhu.edu
Center for Language and Speech Processing
    Johns Hopkins University


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

Date:  Fri, 8 Sep 2000 19:09:03 +0200
From:  Carlos Areces <carlos at wins.uva.nl>
Subject:  Hybrid Logics (HyLo 2000)



************************************************************************

                          Call for Papers

                  Journal of Logic and Computation

                   Special Issue on Hybrid Logics

                       http://hylo-si.hylo.net


HyLo 2000, the Second Workshop on Hybrid Logics, was organized in
Birmingham, Great Britain, on August 14-18, 2000.  Given the interest
the workshop gave rise to, a special issue of the Journal of Logic and
Computation will be devoted to Hybrid Logics.  Contributions are not
limited to those presented at HyLo 2000, and we are now inviting
submissions from all interested authors.


Scope
=====

Hybrid Logics are modal languages which use "terms as
formulas". Although they date back to the late 1960s, the last three
years have seen a resurgence of interest, with new results in
expressivity, interpolation, complexity, and proof techniques. It has
also become clear that hybrid logics offer a theoretical framework for
uniting the work of a surprisingly diverse range of research
traditions in modal-like logics, including description logic, feature
logic, modal logics for information systems, temporal logic, and that
they offer a novel perspective on labeled deduction.  For further
information on hybrid logics, see the Hybrid Logic Webpage:

    http://www.hylo.net

For the special issue, we are interested in attracting both
theoretical papers exploring and developing hybrid logic, and papers
which demonstrate the applicability of hybrid logic.  Papers which
link hybrid logic with other research traditions (e.g. description
logic or labeled deduction) are strongly encouraged.


Submissions
===========

All submissions will be subject to the usual refereeing procedure of
the Journal of Logic and Computation. Contributions must be original,
and must not have been submitted to, or published in, other journals.

Submissions should be sent by email in Postscript format to

    carlos at wins.uva.nl,

accompanied by a plain text abstract.  Authors are strongly encouraged
to use LaTeX to format their papers and use the Journal of Logic and
Computation style file which is available, together with proper
instructions on how to use it, at the Hybrid Logic site:

    http://hylo-si.hylo.net

Papers should not exceed 25 pages in lengh, in the above mentioned
format.


Important Dates
===============

    December 15, 2000      Paper submissions
    February 15, 2001      Acceptance notification
    March 30,    2001      Final submissions due


Related Links
=============

http://www.hylo.net             Hybrid Logic Site (including background
                        information on the topic and an extensive
                        bibliography).

hylo2000.hylo.net        Hylo 2000 home page.

http://www3.oup.co.uk/logcom/
                         Journal of Logic and Computation (Oxford University
                         Press).


Guest Editors (Organizers of Hylo 2000)
=============

Carlos Areces                     Patrick Blackburn
ILLC, University of Amsterdam,    Computerlinguistik, University of Saarland,
The Netherlands                   Germany
http://www.illc.nl/~carlos/       http://www.coli.uni-sb.de/~patrick/
carlos at wins.uva.nl                patrick at coli.uni-sb.de

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