[Corpora-List] 2nd CFP : Journal of Logic and Computation - Special Issue on Natural Language and Knowledge Representation

From: Yuval Krymolowski (yuvalkry@gmail.com)
Date: Sat Jul 08 2006 - 23:58:47 MET DST

  • Next message: Timothy Baldwin: "[Corpora-List] CFP: Australasian Language Technology Workshop (ALTW 2006)"

    Forwarded from Jana Sukkarieh:

    Second CALL FOR PAPERS

    We cordially invite submissions of articles for a special issue of the
    journal of logic and computation <http://logcom.oxfordjournals.org/>
    on natural language and knowledge representation.

    Submission deadline: July 31st, 2006.

    TOPICS

    We believe that the Natural Language Processing (NLP) and the
    Knowledge Representation (KR) communities have common goals. They are
    both concerned with representing knowledge and with reasoning, since
    the best test for the semantic capability of an NLP system is
    performing reasoning tasks. Having these two essential common grounds,
    the two communities ought to have been collaborating, to provide a
    well-suited representation language that covers these grounds.
    However, the two communities also have difficult-to-meet concerns.
    Mainly, the semantic representation (SR) should be expressive enough
    and take the information in context into account, while the KR should
    be equipped with a fast reasoning process.

    The main objection against using an SR or a KR is that they need
    experts to be understood. Non-experts communicate (usually) via a
    natural language (NL), and more or less they understand each other
    while performing a lot of reasoning. An essential practical value of
    representations is their attempt to be transparent. This will
    particularly be useful when/if the system provides a justification for
    a user or a knowledge engineer on its line of reasoning using the
    underlying KR (i.e. without generating back to NL).

    We all seem to believe that, compared to Natural Language, the
    existing Knowledge Representation and reasoning systems are poor.
    Nevertheless, for a long time, the KR community has dismissed the idea
    that NL can be a KR.
    That's because NL can be very ambiguous and there are syntactic and
    semantic processing complexities associated with it. However,
    researchers in both communities have started looking at this issue
    again. Possibly, it has to do with the NLP community making some
    progress in terms of processing and handling ambiguity, the KR
    community realising that a lot of knowledge is already 'coded' in NL
    and that one should reconsider the way they handle expressivity and
    ambiguity.

    For this special journal issue of logic and computation, we invite the
    submission of original high quality articles. Topics for this special
    issue include but not limited to:

    + A novel NL-like KR or building on an existing one

    + Reasoning systems that benefit from properties of NL to reason with NL

    + Semantic representation used as a KR : compromise between expressivity
       and efficiency?

    + More Expressive KR for NL understanding (Any compromise?)

    + Any work exploring how existing representations fall short of
       addressing some problems involved in modelling, manipulating or
       reasoning (whether reasoning as used to get an interpretation for a
       certain utterance, exchange of utterances or what utterances follow
       from other utterances) with NL documents

    + Representations that show how classical logics are not as efficient,
        transparent, expressive or where a one-step application of an
        inference rule require more (complex) steps in a classical environment
        and vice-versa; i.e. how classical logics are more powerful, etc.

    + Building a reasoning test collection for natural language understanding
       systems: any kind of reasoning (deductive, abductive, etc); for a
       deductive test suite see for e.g. deliverable 16 of the FraCas
       project. Also, look at textual entailment challenges 1 and 2.

    + Comparative results (on a common test suite or a common task) of
       different representations or systems that reason with NL (again any
       kind of reasoning). The comparison could be either for efficiency,
       transparency or expressivity

    + Knowledge acquisition systems or techniques that benefit from
       properties of NL to acquire knowledge already "coded" in NL

    + Automated Reasoning, Theorem Proving and KR communities
       views on all this

    + Challenges in Natural Language and Reasoning

    + Where is the NLP or KR community going wrong/right in meeting
       the challenges?

    PROGRAM COMMITTEE

    James ALLEN, University of Rochester, USA
    Patrick BLACKBURN, Institut National de Recherche en Informatique, France
    Johan BOS, Università di Roma "La Sapienza", Italy
    Alan BUNDY, University of Edinburgh, UK
    Harry BUNT, Tilburg University, The Netherlands
    Richard CROUCH, Palo Alto Research Centre, USA
    Ido DAGAN, Bar Ilan University, Israel
    Claire GARDENT, Centre national de la recherche scientifique, France
    Fernando GOMEZ, University of Central Florida, USA
    Sanda HARABAGIU, University of Texas at Dallas, USA
    John HARRISON, Intel Corporation, USA
    Jerry HOBBS, Information Sciences Institute, USA
    Chung Hee HWANG, Raytheon Co., USA
    Ewan KLEIN, University of Edinburgh, UK
    Michael KOHLHASE, International University Bremen, Germany
    Shalom LAPPIN, King's College, UK
    Carsten LUTZ, Dresden University of Technology, Germany
    Inderjeet MANI, George Town University, USA
    David McALLESTER, Toyota Technological Institute at Chicago, USA
    Jeff PELLETIER, Simon Fraser University, Canada
    Stephen PULMAN, University of Oxford, UK
    Allan RAMSAY, The University of Manchester, UK
    Lenhart SCHUBERT, University of Rochester, USA
    John SOWA, VivoMind Intelligence, Inc., USA
    Jana SUKKARIEH, Secerno Ltd, UK
    Geoff SUTCLIFFE, Miami University, USA
    Jan VAN EIJCK, Utrecht University & CWI, The Netherlands

    Paper submission deadline is July 31st, 2006. Submission process is
    available on http://users.ox.ac.uk/~lady0641/Flairs06_NL_KR/journal_issue.html
    and the online submission system is available on :
    <http://www.easychair.org/NLKR2006/>

    Pdf or Ps documents should not exceed 20 pages. The articles will be
    peer reviewed and notification for authors will be sent as soon as
    possible after the date of submission.

    For any queries please contact <jana.sukkarieh@cantab.net>



    This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Sat Jul 08 2006 - 23:59:44 MET DST