[Corpora-List] 3rd CFP - Special Issue of Computational Linguistics on Prepositions in Applications

From: avillavicencio@inf.ufrgs.br
Date: Fri Jul 14 2006 - 18:45:42 MET DST

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                                  Third Call for Papers for
                         Special Issue of Computational Linguistics
                               on Prepositions in Applications

                           SUBMISSION DEADLINE: July 31, 2006

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    GUEST EDITORS

    Aline Villavicencio
    Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

    Valia Kordoni
    Saarland University and DFKI GmbH, Germany

    Timothy Baldwin
    University of Melbourne, Australia and NICTA Victoria Research Labs

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    CONTENTS:

    1. THE SPECIAL ISSUE
    2. TOPICS OF INTEREST
    3. SUBMISSION INFORMATION

    ---------------
    1. THE SPECIAL ISSUE

    The special issue will concentrate on the theoretical aspects of
    computational research on prepositions. Due to their importance
    in computational tasks prepositions, as well as prepositional
    phrases and markers of various sorts, have received a considerable
    amount of attention and occupied a central position in research
    in Computational Linguistics (CL) and Language Technology
    (LT), Artificial Intelligence (AI), Natural Language Processing
    (NLP), as well as Computational Psycholinguistics (CP).
    Researchers from these backgrounds and CL-related disciplines
    have looked at the role of prepositions in shallow and deep
    language processing.

    Despite increasing awareness of the importance of prepositions in NLP tasks,
    very little progress has been made in systematically describing preposition
    semantics. Notably, the only account of the lexical semantics of prepositions
    in resources such as WordNet, FrameNet and PropBank is indirect, in that they
    feature in significant numbers within multiword expressions or as frame
    elements. If prepositions are to be incorporated into such resources as
    first-order entities, a large number of issues must be resolved such as how to
    taxonomically deconstruct the spatial semantics of prepositions, how to
    delineate preposition senses, and how to tease apart preposition and verb
    semantics in phrasal verbs. Our expectation is that such questions will be
    guided by careful analysis of what semantic distinctions and representational
    granularity are required in a range of applications, which will in turn be
    guided by such research as the representation of prepositions within
    implemented grammars, crosslingual preposition semantics, machine perception
    and visualisation of preposition semantics, and computational models of the
    human processing of prepositions.

    ---------------
    2. TOPICS OF INTEREST

    For the proposed special issue we specifically invite submissions that bring a
    theoretical basis to research on prepositions in lexical resources and NLP
    tasks of the sort described above. In particular, we focus on the syntactic
    and semantic treatment of productive and collocational uses of prepositional
    phrases and markers in resources such as WordNet and FrameNet, and the
    utilization of such resources in NLP tasks, such as Machine Translation,
    IE/IR and QA.

    * Extraction of Prepositions:

       There has been considerable research into extraction of prepositions and
       related constructions (e.g. phrasal verbs). Papers which describe the
       extraction of these constructions, including their subcategorisation frames
       and alternation patterns, as are necessary for the semi-automatic extension
       of lexical resources are particularly welcome.

    * Representation of Prepositions in Lexical Resources:

       We encourage papers describing the challenges of providing adequate
       representation of prepositions and related constructions such as would be
       generally applicable in NLP applications.

    * Prepositions in Applications:

       We invite papers that discuss the role of prepositions in NLP tasks,
       focusing specifically on what insights various applications offer for
       lexical resource building, what particular needs different application areas
       have (e.g. what an ideal prepositional lexical resource would be like),
       necessary extensions to existing resources, and how prepositional lexical
       resources of various types could enhance performance over a given task like
       MT, IR, QA and multi-modal systems.

    ---------------
    3. SUBMISSION INFORMATION

    Deadline for paper submissions: July 31, 2006.

    All submissions will be subject to the normal peer review process for this
    journal. Submissions are to be done electronically in pdf format, by sending
    the paper to the editors at the following email address:

       cl-prep@unimelb.edu.au

    Papers must conform to the Computational Linguistics specifications,
    which are available at:

       http://www.clt.mq.edu.au/compling/style.html

    Any queries should be addressed to:

       cl-prep@unimelb.edu.au

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    Website: http://www.inf.ufrgs.br/~avillavicencio/prep-cl.html

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