4.1289 Conf: IJCAI/Non-literal Language/Deadline (1/89)
Elaine Brennan & Allen Renear (EDITORS@BROWNVM.BITNET)
Sat, 27 Apr 91 14:00:05 EDT
Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 4, No. 1289. Saturday, 27 Apr 1991.
Date: 25 Apr 91 18:54 -0700
From: <fass@cs.sfu.ca>
Subject: IJCAI workshop on non-literal language submission deadline is May 2
CALL FOR PAPERS
IJCAI-91 WORKSHOP
COMPUTATIONAL APPROACHES TO NON-LITERAL LANGUAGE:
METAPHOR, METONYMY, IDIOM, SPEECH ACTS, IMPLICATURE
Dan Fass, James Martin, Elizabeth Hinkelman
Sydney, Australia, 24th August 1991
1. Focus of the Workshop
The purpose of the workshop is to stimulate exchange and discussion of
theoretical issues and practical problems of artificial intelligence (AI)
models of non-literal language. Non-literal language includes metaphor,
idiom, "indirect" speech acts, implicature, hyperbole, metonymy, irony,
simile, sarcasm, and other devices whose meaning cannot be obtained by direct
composition of their constituent words. Non-literal language is increasingly
acknowledged as pervasive in natural language and is important to subfields of
natural language processing like machine translation and parsing ill-formed
input. Non-literal language has also attracted interest from researchers in
knowledge representation, planning and plan recognition, learning, belief
modeling, and other subfields of AI.
Researchers are invited to submit papers on topics including (but not limited
to) the computer recognition, interpretation, acquisition, generation, and
robust parsing of non-literal language. Issues of interest include:
o the relationship of non-literal to literal language,
o the adequacy of various forms of knowledge representation (symbolic vs
connectionist vs statistical),
o static vs dynamic mechanisms,
o general vs idiosyncratic treatment of instances,
o instances as novel vs conventional forms,
o comparison and contrast of models of the various forms of non-literal
language,
o broader implications for AI.
2. Organizing Committee
Dan Fass James Martin
Centre for Systems Science, Computer Science Department and
Simon Fraser University, Institute of Cognitive Science,
Burnaby, BC V5A 1S6, Canada. University of Colorado at Boulder,
Tel: (604) 291-3208 Box 430, Boulder, CO 80309-0430, USA.
Fax: (604) 291-4951 Tel: (303) 492-3552
E-mail: fass@cs.sfu.ca Fax: (303) 492-2844
E-mail: martin@boulder.colorado.edu
Elizabeth Hinkelman
Center for Information and Language Studies,
University of Chicago, 1100 E. 57th Street,
Chicago, IL 60637, USA.
Tel: (312) 702-8887
Fax: (312) 702-0775
E-mail: eliz@tira.uchicago.edu
3. Submission Details
Authors should mail three (3) copies of a submission in hard copy form.
Submissions should be no longer than 8 pages (excluding title page); have 1
inch margins on the top, sides and bottom; and use no smaller than 10 point
type. The title page, separate from the body of the paper, should contain
title, names of authors, their affiliation, address, phone, e-mail address,
and an abstract of 100-200 words. Papers that do not conform to this format
will not be reviewed. Send submissions to Dan Fass at his address, given
above. Please do not send submissions to James Martin or Elizabeth Hinkelman.
o Deadline for submissions THURSDAY MAY 2ND
o Notification of acceptance/rejection Friday May 31st
4. Workshop Details
Attendance at the workshop will be limited to 30 participants. Only one
invitation will be issued per accepted submission. To cover costs, it will be
necessary to charge a fee of $US65 for each participant. Participants will be
given further instructions on preparation of camera ready copy and session
format when they receive notification of acceptance. Final papers will be
collected into a set of proceedings and circulated to participants at the
workshop.
Arrangements (yet to be confirmed) are being made for a Special Edition of
Computational Intelligence journal, edited by Fass, Martin and Hinkelman, in
which selected papers from the workshop will appear.