[Corpora-List] Australia: The Eighth International Workshop on Tree Adjoining Grammar and Related Formalisms (TAG+8), at Coling-ACL 2006 --- CFP

From: Timothy Baldwin (tim@csse.unimelb.edu.au)
Date: Tue Feb 14 2006 - 12:14:09 MET

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    The Eighth International Workshop on Tree Adjoining Grammar and
    Related Formalisms (TAG+8)

    endorsed by
    The Association for the Mathematics of Language (ACL SigMoL)

    15-16 July 2006
    Sydney, Australia

    CALL FOR PAPERS

    An important subfield of computational linguistics and natural
    language processing is research that centers around formal machinery
    for describing language. This covers a wide range of
    interdisciplinary work in the cognitive science of language, including
    the mathematical and algorithmic properties of this machinery, the
    grammatical description of natural language, and the mechanisms of
    human language use. The results of this research will often drive
    more applied and empirical areas such as efficient algorithms and
    models for machine learning.

    Tree Adjoining Grammar (TAG) is a prominent formalism in the study of
    natural language because of its attractive formal properties and its
    extended domain of locality. TAG has been studied extensively in the
    last three decades with respect to both its mathematical properties
    and computational applications, as well as its role in constructing
    grammatical theories, models of language processing and applications.

    This workshop, the latest in a series that has been running
    successfully since 1990, aims at bringing together researchers
    interested in various aspects of the TAG formalism including relations
    to other grammar formalisms -- this is the reason for the "+" in the
    workshop's name. In the past, interaction between such formalisms has
    been productive, leading for example to the development of
    broad-coverage grammars, and to new insights into properties of
    different formalisms. Such related formalisms would include minimalist
    syntax, categorial grammar, dependency grammars, HPSG, LFG, and others
    which share with TAG general properties such as lexicalization of
    syntactic structure, a simple notion of local grammatical dependency,
    or mildly context sensitive generative capacity.

    Invited speakers:

      * Mark Johnson, Brown University
      * TBA

    We invite submissions on all aspects of TAG and related systems and
    anticipate holding sessions devoted to:

      * syntactic and semantic theory;
      * mathematical properties;
      * computational and algorithmic studies of parsing,
        interpretation and generation;
      * psycholinguistic modeling; and
      * applications to natural language processing.

    A key goal is thus to deepen knowledge of the formalisms that can be
    used to describe natural language; the intention is for this workshop
    to act as a forum for doing this, in the context of an increasing
    empirical focus in the fields of computational linguistics and natural
    language processing. Equally, however, it is a goal of the workshop
    to encourage the connection of formal results to this empirical work.

    Anonymous abstracts may be submitted for two sorts of presentations at
    the workshop: spoken presentations and poster presentations. Poster
    presentations are particularly appropriate for brief descriptions of
    specialized implementations, resources under development and work in
    progress. Regardless of type of submission, abstracts may not exceed
    two pages in length (not including data, figures and references). All
    abstracts are to be submitted electronically using the ACL START
    conference submission system.

    The workshop website is at http://www.sfb441.uni-tuebingen.de/TAG+8/.

    The ACL website is at http://www.acl2006.mq.edu.au/.

    Important dates:

      * Deadline for submission of abstracts: April 7 2006.
      * Notification of acceptance: May 9 2006.
      * Deadline for camera-ready submission: June 6 2006.
      * Workshop dates: July 15 to 16 2006.

    Proceedings including full papers for accepted abstracts (including
    both oral presentations and poster presentations) will be available
    on-line and at the workshop. In addition, we will explore
    possibilities for subsequent publication of workshop articles, for
    example through a special issue of a journal.

    Organization:

    Local Arrangements Chair

      Mark Dras, Macquarie University

    Program Committee

      Tilman Becker (co-chair), DFKI
      Laura Kallmeyer (co-chair), University of Tuebingen
      Srinivas Bangalore, AT&T Research
      Eric de la Clergerie, INRIA
      Dan Flickinger, CSLI, Stanford University
      Robert Frank, Johns Hopkins University
      Akio Fujiyoshi, Ibaraki University
      Claire Gardent, LORIA
      Chung-Hye Han, Simon Fraser University
      Karin Harbusch, University of Koblenz
      Geert-Jan Kruijff, Charles University
      Vincenzo Lombardo, University of Turin
      David McDonald
      Martha Palmer, University of Colorado
      Owen Rambow, Columbia University
      Frank Richter, University of Tuebingen
      James Rogers, Earlham College
      Maribel Romero, University of Pennsylvania
      Anoop Sarkar, Simon Fraser University
      Giorgio Satta, University of Padua
      Stuart Shieber, Harvard College
      Mark Steedman, University of Edinburgh
      Matthew Stone, Rutgers University
      Yuka Tateisi, University of Tokyo
      David Weir, University of Sussex
      Vijay-Shanker, University of Delaware
      Naoki Yoshinaga, University of Tokyo

    Previous TAG+ meetings have been held at:

      * Dagstuhl (1990)
      * Philadelphia (1992)
      * Paris (1994)
      * Philadelphia (1998)
      * Paris (2000)
      * Venice (2002)
      * Vancouver (2004)



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