Appel: CSLP 2012, Final deadline extension: 5 July 2012
Thierry Hamon
thierry.hamon at UNIV-PARIS13.FR
Tue Jun 26 20:42:26 UTC 2012
Date: Tue, 26 Jun 2012 16:19:37 +0200
From: Yannick Parmentier <yannick.parmentier at univ-orleans.fr>
Message-ID: <20120626141937.GB11375 at mononoke>
X-url: http://www.univ-orleans.fr/lifo/evenements/CSLP2012/
** apologies for cross-posting **
CALL FOR PAPERS & PARTICIPATION
** NEW: Due to several requests, deadline for submission has been
extended to July 5. This is the last and final deadline extension. **
========================================================
Constraint Solving and Language Processing - CSLP 2012 -
Seventh International Workshop
Universite d'Orleans, Orleans, France
September 13-14, 2012
http://www.univ-orleans.fr/lifo/evenements/CSLP2012/
========================================================
INTRODUCTION
============
The Constraint Solving and Language Processing (CSLP) workshop considers
the role of constraints in the representation of language and the
implementation of language processing from an interdisciplinary
perspective. This theme should be interpreted inclusively: contributions
from linguistics, computer science, psycholinguistics and related areas
are welcome, and an interdisciplinary perspective is of particular
interest.
Constraints are widely used in linguistics, computer science, and
psychology. How they are used, however, varies widely according to the
research domain: knowledge representation, cognitive modelling, problem
solving mechanisms, etc. These different perspectives are complementary,
each one adding a piece to the puzzle. For example, linguistics proposes
in-depth descriptions implementing constraints in order to filter out
structures by means of description languages, constraint ranking,
etc. The constraint programming paradigm, on the other hand, shows that
constraints have to be taken as a systematic whole and can thus play a
role in building the structures (or can even replace
structures). Finally, psycholinguistics experiment have been made,
investigating the role of constraint systems for cognitive processes in
comprehension and production, as well as addressing how they can be
acquired.
TOPICS
======
CSLP is open to submissions on topics including, but not limited to:
* Constraints in human language comprehension and production
* Context modelling and discourse interpretation
* Acquisition of constraints
* Constraints and learning
* Cross-theoretical view of the notion of constraint
* New advances in constraint-based linguistic theories
* Constraint satisfaction (CS) technologies for NLP
* Linguistic analysis and linguistic theories biased towards CS or
constraint logic programming (CLP)
* Application of CS or CLP for NLP
* CS and CLP for other than textual or spoken languages, e.g., sign
languages and biological, multimodal human-computer interaction,
visual languages
* Probabilistic constraint-based reasoning for NLP and context
comprehension
PREVIOUS EDITIONS
=================
Six CSLP workshops have been organized in the past in: Karlsruhe,
Germany (2011), Hamburg, Germany (2008), Roskilde, Denmark (2007),
Sydney, Australia (2006), Sitges, Spain (2005), Roskilde, Denmark
(2004).
VENUE
=====
CSLP 2012 will take place at LIFO, the Computer Science laboratory of
the University of Orleans, France. Orleans is located in the northern
bend of the Loire river, it belongs to the Vallee de la Loire sector,
which was in 2000 inscribed by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site. Orleans
is located 120 kilometers south-west of Paris, it is bordered to the
north by the Beauce region and the national forest of Orleans (500 km2),
and by the Sologne region to the south.
IMPORTANT DATES
===============
Submission Deadline: June 10, 2012
Notification: August 1st, 2012
Camera-ready Version: September 1st, 2012
Workshop Dates: September 13-14, 2012
SUBMISSIONS
===========
Papers must be submitted electronically as PDF files and be prepared
using the Springer LNAI/LNCS format. Detailed formatting instructions
can be found at:
http://www.springer.com/computer/lncs?SGWID=0-164-6-793341-0
Papers should present original, unpublished work. Simultaneous
submission to other venues with published proceedings is
prohibited. CSLP accepts two kinds of submissions:
- full papers (12 pages including references) reporting completed,
significant research,
- short papers (6 pages including references) reporting ongoing
work and partial results.
Each submission will be reviewed by three program committee
members. Accepted long papers will be presented within 20 minutes talks
plus 10 minutes for questions. Accepted short papers will be presented
within 10 minutes talks plus 5 minutes for questions. Both paper types
will be published in the workshop proceedings.
Since reviewing will be blind, the submission should not include the
authors' names and affiliations. Other identifying information such as
obvious self-references (e.g., "We showed in [12] ...") and financial or
personal acknowledgements should be omitted in the submitted papers
whenever feasible.
Papers have to be submitted via the easychair conference management
system using the following link:
http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=cslp2012
A volume at an international publisher will be considered for selected
and revised papers, if number and quality of submissions permits.
REGISTRATION
============
Registration is now open, by filling the form available at
http://www.univ-orleans.fr/lifo/evenements/CSLP2012/inscription.php
The registration fees (50 EUR for students and 100 EUR for researchers
until August, 7th) cover the electronic proceedings (USB stick), the
participation to the coffee breaks, the lunches, the banquet, and the
social event (visit of a Castle of the Vallee de la Loire).
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
================
Ruth Kempson, King's College London
Stergios Chatzikyriakidis, Royal Holloway University of London and Open
University of Cyprus
Title: "Grammars as Mechanisms for Real-Time Tree-Growth: Explaining
Clitic Pronouns"
Abstract: In this talk, we use the puzzle of clitic pronoun placement
and clustering in Modern Greek to argue for a shift of perspective into
defining grammars as mechanisms for incremental growth of
interpretation, as argued in Dynamic Syntax: Kempson et al. (2001), Cann
et al. (2005) Chatzikyriakidis and Kempson (2011). In this framework,
the concept of structural underspecification and growth of semantic
representation is taken as the core syntactic notion, grounded in the
modal Logic of Finite Trees: Blackburn and Meyer-viol (1994). With modal
statements expressing an array of more or less fixed tree-node
relations, restrictions on tree development are definable in a way not
available to grammars lacking such tree-growth dynamics. One of these is
the restriction that no more than one underspecified relation of a type
can be built at a time, their being indistinguishable with only this
weak characterisation, which we use to explain a range of clitic
clustering restrictions found in many clitic-pronoun systems – we take
the so-called Person-Case Constraint (PCC) as displayed in different
ways in dialects of Modern Greek as our case study.
PROGRAM COMMITEE
================
Philippe Blache, CNRS - Université de Provence, France
Adriane Boyd, Universität Tübingen, Germany
Aoife Cahill, ETS Princeton, USA
Henning Christiansen, Roskilde University, Denmark
Berthold Crysmann, CNRS - Paris 7, France
Verónica Dahl, Simon Fraser University, Canada
Helen de Hoop, Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands
Eric De La Clergerie, INRIA - Paris 7, France
Denys Duchier, Université d'Orléans, France
Claire Gardent, CNRS - LORIA, France
Barbara Hemforth, Université Paris Descartes, France
Maria Dolores Jiménez-López, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Spain
Laura Kallmeyer, Heinrich Heine Universität, Düsseldorf, Germany
Ruth Kempson, King's College London, UK
Stephan Kepser, Codecentric AG Düsseldorf, Germany
Patrick McCrae, Langtec Hamburg, Germany
Wolfgang Menzel, Universität Hamburg, Germany
Detmar Meurer, Universität Tübingen, Germany
Véronique Moriceau, Université Paris XI, France
Jean-Philippe Prost, Université de Montpellier, France
Adam Przepiórkowski, IPIPAN, Warsaw, Poland
Christian Rétoré, Université de Bordeaux, France
Frank Richter, Universität Tübingen, Germany
Sylvain Salvati, INRIA - Université de Bordeaux, France
Sylvain Schmitz, ENS Cachan, France
Kiril Simov, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria
Jesse Tseng, CNRS - Université de Toulouse, France
Jørgen Villadsen, Technical University of Denmark
LOCAL ORGANIZING COMMITEE
=========================
Chairs:
Denys Duchier (LIFO - Université d'Orléans)
Yannick Parmentier (LIFO - Université d'Orléans)
Members:
Guillaume Cleuziou (LIFO - Université d'Orléans)
Thi-Bich-Hanh Dao (LIFO - Université d'Orléans)
Abdelali Ed-Dbali (LIFO - Université d'Orléans)
Matthieu Exbrayat (LIFO - Université d'Orléans)
Matthieu Lopez (LIFO - Université d'Orléans)
Lionel Martin (LIFO - Université d'Orléans)
Simon Petitjean (LIFO - Université d'Orléans)
Jacques-Henri Sublemontier (LIFO - Université d'Orléans)
Information about the Workshop is available at the CSLP workshop
website: http://www.univ-orleans.fr/lifo/evenements/CSLP2012/
E-mail: cslp2012 at easychair.org
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