14.3377, Calls: Ling Theories/France; General Ling/France
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LINGUIST List: Vol-14-3377. Mon Dec 8 2003. ISSN: 1068-4875.
Subject: 14.3377, Calls: Ling Theories/France; General Ling/France
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1)
Date: Fri, 5 Dec 2003 16:46:20 -0500 (EST)
From: schlenke at ucla.edu
Subject: Workshop on Semantic Approaches to Binding Theory
2)
Date: Tue, 2 Dec 2003 15:13:14 GMT
From: Alessio Lomuscio <alessio at dcs.kcl.ac.uk>
Subject: LCMAS04 CFP
-------------------------------- Message 1 -------------------------------
Date: Fri, 5 Dec 2003 16:46:20 -0500 (EST)
From: schlenke at ucla.edu
Subject: Workshop on Semantic Approaches to Binding Theory
Workshop on Semantic Approaches to Binding Theory
Date: 16-Aug-2004 - 20-Aug-2004
Location: Nancy, France
Contact: Philippe Schlenker
Contact Email: schlenke at ucla.edu
Meeting URL: http://www.linguistics.ucla.edu/people/schlenker/ESSLLI04.html
Linguistic Sub-field: Syntax ,Semantics ,Linguistic Theories
Call Deadline: 05-Mar-2004
Meeting Description:
Binding Theory, which is concerned with sentence-internal constraints
on anaphora, was originally conceived in syntactic terms as a set of
conditions on the distribution of indices (Chomsky 1983). But other
researchers have attempted to derive these constraints from lexical
semantics or the interpretative procedure rather than the syntax. Some
add a semantic component to a syntactic core (e.g. Reinhart 1983,
Heim 1993, Fox 2000, Buring 2002), but others are more radically
semantic (e.g. works by Jacobson, Keenan, Barker & Shan, Butler). The
workshop will provide a forum to compare and assess these diverse
proposals.
Workshop: Semantic Approaches to Binding Theory
http://www.linguistics.ucla.edu/people/schlenker/ESSLLI04.html
Organized as part of the European Summer School on Logic, Language and
Information (ESSLLI 2004) http://esslli2004.loria.fr/
16-20 August, 2004 in Nancy
Workshop Organizers:
Ed Keenan, UCLA (ekeenan at ucla.edu)
Philippe Schlenker, UCLA & IJN (schlenke at ucla.edu)
Workshop Purpose:
Binding Theory, which is concerned with sentence-internal constraints
on anaphora, was originally conceived in syntactic terms as a set of
conditions on the distribution of indices (Chomsky 1983). Thus
Condition A stated that anaphors are locally bound (*John/I thinks
that himself/I is clever); Condition B stated that Pronominals are
locally free (*He/I likes him/I), and Condition C required that
R-expressions be free (*He/I thinks that John/I is clever). But other
researchers have attempted to derive these constraints from lexical
semantics or the interpretative procedure rather than the syntax. Some
add a semantic component to a syntactic core (e.g. Reinhart 1983,
Heim 1993, Fox 2000, Buring 2002), but others are more radically
semantic (e.g. works by Jacobson, Keenan, Barker & Shan, Butler).
The workshop, which is intended for advanced PhD students and
researchers, will provide a forum to compare and assess these diverse
proposals. We welcome proposals for 45mn contributions (30mn
presentation + 15mn discussion), which should be specific, explicit
and semantically informed. We list below some possible topics, though
the list is not exhaustive.
Possible Workshop Topics:
-Semantic analyses of standard Binding Conditions
-Arguments pro or contra semantic approaches to Binding Theory
-Reflexivity
-Relation between logophors and anaphors
-Relation between deixis and anaphora
-Cross-linguistic variation in binding conditions
Submission details:
Authors are invited to submit an abstract in pdf format describing
their proposal. Submissions should not exceed 3 pages. Please send
your submission electronically to schlenke at ucla.edu by *March 5,
2004*. The abstracts will be reviewed by the workshop's program
committee. Please include author details in the accompanying e-mail,
leaving the pdf attachment anonymous. Authors whose submission is
accepted should be prepared to send later (by May 15th) an extended
(6-page) version of their abstract, to appear in the workshop
proceedings published by ESSLLI.
Workshop format:
The workshop is part of ESSLLI and is open to all ESSLLI
participants. It will consist of five 90-minute sessions held over
five consecutive days in the second week of ESSLLI. There will be 2
slots for paper presentations and discussion per session. On the first
day, the workshop organizers will give an introduction to the topic.
Invited Speakers:
Ken Shan (Harvard) & Chris Barker (UCSD)
Alastair Butler (ILLC/Department of Philosophy, University of
Amsterdam)
Workshop Program Committee:
Ed Keenan (UCLA)
Philippe Schlenker (UCLA & IJN)
Chris Barker (UCSD)
Ken Shan (Harvard)
Alastair Butler (ILLC/Department of Philosophy, University of
Amsterdam)
Important Dates:
Submissions: March 5, 2004
Notification: April 19, 2004
Preliminary program: April 23, 2004
ESSLLI early registration: May 1, 2004
Extended (6-page) version of the abstracts for the proceedings: May
15, 2004
Final program: June 25, 2004
Workshop dates: August 16-20
Local Arrangements:
All workshop participants including the presenters will be required to
register for ESSLLI. The registration fee for authors presenting a
paper will correspond to the early student/workshop speaker
registration fee.
There will be no reimbursement for travel costs and accommodation.
Further Information:
About the workshop:
http://www.linguistics.ucla.edu/people/schlenker/ESSLLI04.html
About ESSLLI: http://esslli2004.loria.fr
-------------------------------- Message 2 -------------------------------
Date: Tue, 2 Dec 2003 15:13:14 GMT
From: Alessio Lomuscio <alessio at dcs.kcl.ac.uk>
Subject: LCMAS04 CFP
Call for Papers
LCMAS04
An ESSLLI04 Workshop on
Logic and Communication in Multi-Agent Systems
http://www.win.tue.nl/~evink/lcmas04.html
The workshop, this year in its second edition, aims at bringing
together graduate students and researchers interested in topics
related to the use of formal tools when applied to modelling,
specifying, verifying, and reasoning about multi-agent systems in
which communication and updating play a crucial role. Specifically,
the workshop aims at providing a forum for discussing technical issues
that arise with formalisms (epistemic, temporal, dynamic and
authentication logics and tools) inspired by the needs of modelling
information exchanges in multi-agent systems.
The workshop will be held within the context of ESSLLI04, the 2004
edition of the European Summer School on Logic Language and
Computation, to be held in Nancy in August 2004.
WORKSHOP SPECIFIC THEMES
Particular focus of attention will be given to papers relating to the
following specific themes:
* Dynamics of epistemic positions: Combinations of epistemic logic
and temporal logic (and related semantical issues) resulting from
communicative acts, such as message passing, broadcasting, etc.
Modelling of epistemic updates, and refinements following
communicative acts.
* Communication protocols: Semantics for communications processes in
multi-agent systems. Formal dependencies between communication
protocols and intensional (e.g., epistemic) properties of the
agents. Using CSP and CCP for agent-communication.
* Security and authorisation: Logics (deontic logic, BAN logic, etc.)
for security and authorisation, where the assumption that the other
agents in the network are cooperative, or at least not hostile, is
dropped. Semantics for authorisation logics that are general and
complete, or languages that are strong enough to prove that certain
occasions (intruders entering the network, unwanted eavesdropping)
do not occur.
* Semantics of speech acts: Logical semantics of speech acts and
institutional communication. Semantics of agent communication
languages and their relationship to speech acts. Logics for
planning speech acts. Relationships between speech act theory and
belief revision & epistemic updates.
INVITED SPEAKERS
Prof. Dr. Holger Schlingloff (Berlin), and Dr Ahti-Veikko Pietarinen
(Helsinki) have very kindly agreed to give invited presentation at
LCMAS04. The abstracts of the talks will be made available in due
course.
WORKSHOP ORGANISERS
Wiebe van der Hoek, University of Liverpool
Alessio Lomuscio, King's College London
Erik de Vink, Technische Universiteit Eindhoven
Mike Wooldridge, University of Liverpool
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Johan van Benthem (University of Amsterdam), Frank de Boer (CWI
Amsterdam, Utrecht), Iliano Cervesato (US Naval Research Labs), Marco
Colombetti (Politecnico di Milano), Rogier van Eijk (University of
Utrecht), Andrew Jones (King's College London), Yannis Labrou (Fujitsu
Labs of America), Riccardo Pucella (Cornell University), Pierre-Yves
Schobbens (University of Namur), Marek Sergot (Imperial College), Luca
Vigano' (ETH Zurich)
PUBLICATION DETAILS
The proceedings of the LCMAS workshop held in June 2003 in Eindhoven
will published in the Electronic Lecture Notes in Theoretical Computer
Science series later in autumn 2003. This year's proceedings will be
"informally" published by ESSLLI. Depending on the success of the
workshop we will consider arranging for selected papers to appear in a
journal.
SUBMISSIONS AND TIMETABLE
Those wishing to participate in the workshop are invited to submit an
original research paper of up to 15 pages in plain article style. The
first page of your submission should include the full name and contact
details of at least one author. Electronic submission in Postscript
or PDF is strongly encouraged. Submissions should be sent to Erik de
Vink, e-mail evink at win.tue.nl.
15 March, 2004: Submission deadline
19 April, 2004: Notification of acceptance
15 May, 2004: Final version due.
16-20 Aug, 2004: Workshop.
WORKSHOP FORMAT
The workshop is part of ESSLLI and is open to all ESSLLI
participants. It will consist of five 90-minute sessions held over
five consecutive days between 16 Aug and 20 Aug.
LOCAL ARRANGEMENTS
All workshop participants including the presenters will be required to
register for ESSLLI. The registration fee for authors presenting a
paper will correspond to the early student/workshop speaker
registration fee. Moreover, a number of additional fee waiver grants
will be made available by the OC on a competitive basis and workshop
participants are eligible to apply for those.
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