From: Tracy Holloway King [thking@parc.com] Sent: 02 January 2004 21:35 To: LFG@LISTSERV.LINGUISTLIST.ORG Subject: LFG Bulletin LFG BULLETIN DECEMBER 2003 ------------------------------ * LINGUISTICS IN THE LITERATURE * ------------------------------ The idea that Winter could actually be enjoyable would never have occurred to Ramtop people, who had eighteen different words for snow. All of them, unfortunately, unprintable. Terry Pratchett "Wyrd Sisters" ---------------- * OTHER NEWS * ---------------- NEW BULLETIN MAINTAINER: ----------------------- We are extremely pleased to announce that Ash Asudeh will be taking over as bulletin maintainer starting with the March bulletin. Please send any bulletin items to him at: asudeh@csli.stanford.edu Ash has promised to provide the same prompt and courteous service that we have and so we are able to resign our position with no regrets whatsoever. LFG2004 CALL FOR PAPERS: ----------------------- *ABSTRACTS ARE DUE FEBRUARY 15* July 10-12, 2004 University of Canterbury Christchurch, New Zealand contacts: Ida Toivonen Ash Asudeh (asudeh@csli.stanford.edu) http://www-lfg.stanford.edu/lfg/lfg2004/ Note: A Winter School in LFG and computational linguistics is planned for 4 July to 8 July 2004, immediately preceding the LFG 2004 conference. Details available through the conference web site. First Call for Papers: LFG 2004 2004 INTERNATIONAL LEXICAL FUNCTIONAL GRAMMAR CONFERENCE DATES 10-12 July 2004 Christchurch, New Zealand Abstract submission receipt deadline: 15 February 2004 Submissions should be sent to the LFG Program Committee (see addresses below) The 9th International Lexical Functional Grammar Conference will be hosted by the Department of Linguistics, University of Canterbury, in Christchurch, New Zealand from 10 to 12 July 2004. A pre-conference activity is planned for 9 July. For the week preceding the conference weekend (4-8 July 2004), a Winter School in LFG and computational linguistics is planned. See the end of this CFP for further details. The Winter School is yet to be confirmed. LFG 2004 welcomes work within the formal architecture of Lexical-Functional Grammar as well as typological, formal, and computational work within the 'spirit of LFG' as a lexicalist approach to language employing a parallel, constraint-based framework. The conference aims to promote interaction and collaboration among researchers interested in non-derivational approaches to grammar, where grammar is seen as the interaction of (perhaps violable) constraints from multiple levels of structuring, including those of syntactic categories, grammatical relations, semantics and discourse. SUBMISSIONS: TALKS AND POSTERS The main conference sessions will involve 40-minute talks (30 min. + 10 min. discussion), and poster/system presentations. Contributions should focus on results from completed as well as ongoing research, with an emphasis on novel approaches, methods, ideas, and perspectives, whether descriptive, theoretical, formal or computational. Presentations should describe original, unpublished work. DISSERTATION SESSION We plan to hold a special session for students to present recent PhD dissertations (or other student research dissertations). The dissertations must be completed by the time of the conference, and they should be made publicly accessible (e.g., on the World Wide Web). The talks in this session should provide an overview of the contents of the dissertation; the time slots for the presentations will be 30 minutes in total. The International LFG Association (ILFGA) will pay the conference fees for the students presenting at the student session. Students should note that the main sessions are certainly also open to student submissions. WORKSHOPS We also invite proposals for workshops -- a small group of talks (2-4) on a coherent topic that can be expected to generate opposing views and discussion with the broader audience. Panelists for workshops are usually determined by the workshop organizers. Workshop papers should be distributed in advance among panelists so they can cross-reference one another's approaches. At this point in time, we welcome suggestions for workshops from potential organisers or people with specific interests. The suggestions should be sent to the local organizers at: ida.toivonen@canterbury.ac.nz asudeh@csli.stanford.edu TIMETABLE Deadline for abstracts: 15 February 2004 Acceptances sent out: 31 March 2004 Deadline for workshop submissions: 15 January 2004 Workshop acceptances: 15 February 2004 Conference: 10-12 July 2004 SUBMISSION SPECIFICATIONS Abstracts for talks, posters and the dissertation session must be received by February 15, 2004. All abstracts should be sent to the program committee at the addresses given below. For workshops, further site information, or offers of organisational help, contact the local organisers at the addresses below. Submissions should be in the form of abstracts only. Abstracts can be up to two A4 pages in 10pt or larger type and should include a title. Omit name and affiliation, and obvious self reference. Note: we no longer ask for a separate page for data and figures (c-/f- and related structures). They can be included in the text of the abstract, obeying the overall two-page limit. Abstracts may be submitted by email or by regular mail. Email submission is preferred. The following information should be provided on a separate page or in the body of the email: PAPER TITLE: ________________________________________ (for each author:) NAME: _____________________________ AFFILIATION: _____________________________ E-MAIL ADDRESS: _____________________________ IS AUTHOR A STUDENT? (Y/N) ___ (for author of contact:) MAIL ADDRESS: _____________________________ _____________________________ PHONE NUMBER: _____________________________ FAX NUMBER: _____________________________ SESSION TYPE: _______________________ (Should submission be considered for (1) either talk or poster, (2) only talk, (3) only poster/demonstration, (4) dissertation session.) (for dissertation session submissions:) UNIVERSITY: _____________________________ ADVISOR(S): _____________________________ (EXPECTED) DATE OF SUBMISSION: _____________________ (Note: In the absence of session type specification, submissions will be considered for both the talk and the poster sessions, and the program co-chairs may decide that certain submissions are better as poster presentations than as read papers.) Submission by Regular Mail: Include: - Eight copies of the abstract/paper. - A card or cover sheet with author information. Submission by Email: Include the author information in the body of your email message. Include or preferably attach your abstract. The preferred file formats are PDF or plain ASCII. (If you cannot create PDF, HTML and postscript will be accepted too. Postscript files require special care to avoid problems: make sure your system is set to include all fonts, or at least all but the standard 13; if using a recent version of Word, make sure you click the printer Properties button and then the Postscript tab, and there choose Optimize for Portability; on all platforms make sure the system is not asking for a particular paper size or other device-specific configuration. It is your responsibility to send us a file that we and our reviewers can print. You can often test this by trying to look at the file in a screen previewer such as Ghostview.) All abstracts will be reviewed by at least three people. Papers will appear in the proceedings, which will be published online by CSLI Publications. Selected papers may also appear in a printed volume published by CSLI Publications. ORGANISERS AND THEIR CONTACT ADDRESSES Send abstract submissions and inquiries about submissions to: Program Committee: Email: Jonas Kuhn jonask@mail.utexas.edu Tara Mohanan elltaram@nus.edu.sg Mail: LFG 2004 c/o Tara Mohanan Department of English Language and Literature FASS Block 5, 7 Arts Link National University of Singapore Singapore 117570 Local conference organisers: Email: Ida Toivonen ida.toivonen@canterbury.ac.nz Ash Asudeh asudeh@csli.stanford.edu Fax: +64 3 364 2969 Mail: Ida Toivonen Department of Linguistics University of Canterbury Private Bag 4800 Christchurch 8020 New Zealand WINTER SCHOOL IN LFG AND COMPUTATIONAL LINGUISTICS A Winter School in LFG and computational linguistics is planned for 4 July to 8 July 2004. Plans are for the school to feature: 1. A one-day intensive introduction to LFG and subsequent written and implemented exercise sessions. The goal of this section is: a. To give sufficient broad training in LFG for novices to participate more fully in the rest of the school and the LFG 2004 conference. b. To give novices and researchers experienced in LFG theory practice in implementing computational LFG grammars. 2. A more advanced, issues-oriented computational linguistics course, taught from an LFG perspective but with broad relevance to the field of computational linguistics in general. 3. An advanced course or workshop on a topic of current interest to the LFG community. 4. Evening plenary lectures. The Winter School is yet to be confirmed. LFG2005: -------- University of Bergen, Norway dates to be determined contacts: Helge Dyvik (helge.dyvik@lili.uib.no) Victoria Rosen (victoria.rosen@lili.uib.no) Recent LFG Publications: ------------------------ NOTE: Please send Ash Asudeh (asudeh@csli.stanford.edu) email to have your publications included. Lexical-Functional Grammar Analysis of Chinese. 2003. Adams Bodomo and K. K. Luke (Editors). Journal of Chinese Linguistics Monograph 19. Case Systems: Beyond Structural Distinctions. 2003. Miriam Butt and Tracy Holloway King. In Brandner and Zinsmeister (Ed.) New Perspectives on Case Theory. CSLI Publications. 53-87. Grammar Writing, Testing, and Evaluating. 2003. Miriam Butt and Tracy Holloway King. In Farghaly (Ed.) A Handbook for Language Engineers. CSLI Publications. 129-179. Recent Advances in Example-based Machine Translation. 2003. Michael Carl and Andy Way (eds.). Kluwer. From Treebank Resources to LFG F-Structures. Automatic F-Structure Annotation of Treebank Trees and CFGs extracted from Treebanks. 2003. Anette Frank, Louisa Sadler, Josef van Genabith, Andy Way. In A. Abeille (ed): Treebanks. Building and using syntactically annotated corpora, Kluwer Academic Publishers, The Netherlands. PROCEEDINGS OF THE LFG03 CONFERENCE. 2003. CSLI On-Line Publications. http://cslipublications.stanford.edu/hand/miscpubsonline.html Papers include: * Matthew Beach Asymmetries between Passivization and Antipassivization in the Tarramiutut Subdialect of Inuktitut * Leonoor van der Beek The Dutch it-cleft Constructions * Kersti Börjars, Elisabet Engdahl and Maia Andréasson Subject and Object Positions in Swedish * Adams Bodomo, Olivia Lam and Natalie Yu Double Object and Serial Verb Benefactive Constructions in Cantonese * George Aaron Broadwell Optimality, Complex Predication, and Parallel Structures in Zapotec * Miriam Butt, Tracy Holloway King and John T. Maxwell III Complex Predication via Restriction * Lionel Clement and Alexandra Kinyon Generating LFGs with a MetaGrammar * Elizabeth Coppock Sometimes It's Hard to be Coherent * Amy Dahlstrom Focus Constructions in Meskwaki (Fox) * Lachlan Duncan The Syntactdic Structure of Tz'utujil (Maya) * Yehuda Falk The English Auxiliary System Revisted * Martin Forst Treebank Conversion --- Creating a German F-structure Bank from the TIGER Corpus * Anette Frank Projecting LFG F-structures from Chunks * Ronald M. Kaplan and Tracy Holloway King Low-level Markup and Large-scale LFG Grammar Processing * Valia Kordoni Valence Alternations in German: An LMT Analysis * Jonas Kuhn Generalized Tree Descriptions for LFG * KP Mohanan and Tara Mohanan Universal and Language-particular Constraints in OT-LFG * Tara Mohanan and KP Mohanan Input, Output Candidates, Markedness Constraints, and Ineffability in OT-LFG * Rachel Nordlinger and Louisa Sadler The Syntax and Semantics of Tensed Nominals * M.C. O'Connor Differential Possessor Expression: Are Pair-Wise Comparisons Ever Required? * Ryo Otoguro Focus Clitics and Discourse Information Spreading * Andrew Spencer A Realizational Approach to Case * Cholthicha Sudmuk The thuuk Construction in Thai * Jürgen Wedekind and Bjarne Ørsnes Restriction and Verbal Complexes in LFG: A Case Study for Danish ----------- * ILFGA * ----------- DONATE TO ILFGA: There are three ways to make a donation: 0. Donate at the conference! ILFGA will be accepting donations at LFG04 in New Zealand. 1. Send a check made out to "Intl. Lexical Functional Grammar Assc." in US dollars to: Tracy Holloway King NLTT/ISTL PARC 3333 Coyote Hill Rd Palo Alto, CA 94304 USA This is the simplest (and cheapest) method if you have access to US dollars. 2. Have money transfered directly into the account. Please let the ILFGA Treasurer, Tracy Holloway King (thking@parc.com), know if you want to make a donation in this way. ILFGA is a 501(3)c organization (i.e. a non-profit) and as such contributions are tax deductible in the US (and perhaps elsewhere; if you are not in the US, check your home country for tax status). A receipt will be issued for each donation. BE IN THE ILFGA DATABASE: Please add yourself to the ILFGA linguist database. To do so, send email to Chris Culy (culy@fxpal.com) with the following information: NAME AFFILIATION OFFICIAL ADDRESS EMAIL ADDRESS WEB PAGE RESEARCH INTERESTS RESEARCH LANGUAGES The database can be accessed at: http://www-lfg.stanford.edu/lfg/ilfga/member-database/ilfga-namelist.html JOIN ILFGA: If you haven't yet, you can still join ILFGA, the International Lexical Functional Grammar Association by sending mail to: majordomo@lists.stanford.edu with the message: subscribe ilfga-members ----------- * EDITORS * ----------- Please send updates, suggestions and news for inclusion in the next LFG Bulletin (March 2004) to: asudeh@csli.stanford.edu Most importantly, please send information about: - your recent publications or papers - publically available grammars - current grammar development efforts - recent dissertations Thank you, Miriam Butt and Tracy Holloway King ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Frequently Asked Questions: FAQs Information on the following topics is available on the LFG WebPages: http://clwww.essex.ac.uk/LFG/ http://www-lfg.stanford.edu/lfg 1. WHAT IS LEXICAL-FUNCTIONAL GRAMMAR? 2. WHAT ARE THE BEST INTRODUCTORY BOOKS/ARTICLES TO LFG? 3. THE LFG WWW SITE 4. THE LFG MAILING LIST 5. LFG BIBLIOGRAPHY, RECENT PUBLICATIONS IN LFG 6. HOW TO RETRIEVE LFG DOCUMENTS 7. PUBLICALLY AVAILABLE LFG SYSTEMS 8. CURRENT GRAMMAR DEVELOPMENT EFFORT 9. UPCOMING EVENTS If you have access to ftp, but no access to Web, you can get a copy of the FAQ by ftp or email (see "How to Retrieve LFG Documents" below). Please help keep this document and the FAQ up to date! Send updates and suggestions for improvements to the FAQ to doug#essex.ac.uk. Send updates, suggestions and news for inclusion in the LFG Bulletin to mutt@ccl.umist.ac.uk or thking@parc.com, or post them on the LFG list (LFG@listserv.linguistlist.org). Most importantly, please send information about: - your recent publications or papers - publically available grammars - current grammar development efforts --- * HOW TO RETRIEVE LFG DOCUMENTS * Some LFG documents are available on the web, by FTP, or by email. There are three ways to get them. (1) Most of the documents are accessible via the WWW: The current version of the list of Frequently Asked Questions about LFG: http://www-lfg.stanford.edu/lfg/lfg-information.html Introductions to LFG: http://www-lfg.stanford.edu/lfg/clwww.essex.ac.uk/LFG/Introductions.html http://clwww.essex.ac.uk/LFG/Introductions.html The LFG bibliography: http://www-lfg.stanford.edu/lfg/bibliography.html http://clwww.essex.ac.uk/LFG/Bibliography.html The bibliography is also available at the CL/MT Group Bibliographic Search Page, maintained by Doug Arnold of the University of Essex. The URL is: http://clwww.essex.ac.uk/search/ (2) You can get the documents by anonymous FTP from: ftp ftp-lfg.stanford.edu All of the documents are in subdirectories of the directory /pub/lfg. Here is a list of some of the files in that directory that are relevant for LFG researchers: in the directory /pub/lfg/bibliography: The LFG Bibliography in various versions and formats. in the directory /pub/lfg/lfg-information: FAQ [the latest version of the list of Frequently Asked Questions about LFG] in the directory /pub/lfg/lfg-introductions: pracinstrucsforlfg.ps [an introduction to LFG notation by Michael Wescoat] formal-architecture.ps [an introduction to LFG by Ron Kaplan] neidle.ps [an introduction to LFG by Carol Neidle] sadler.ps [a paper on recent developments in LFG by Louisa Sadler] in the directory /pub/lfg/lfg-presentations: Slides and handouts from LFG conferences and courses. in the directory /pub/lfg/papers: Papers that have been submitted to the LFG Archive. Compressed versions of some of these files are also available. The file names of the compressed versions are the same, except they have ".gz" at the end. There may be other LFG-related files in that directory as well, which you are welcome to retrieve. (3) You can get some files by email, via the Listserv "get" command. A list of currently available files can be obtained by sending a message to LISTSERV@listserv.linguistlist.org (please note: address the message to LISTSERV, not LFG). The message should contain the following command: index lfg The following files are available, and there may be additional files as well: LFG-bulletin.txt [the latest version of the LFG Bulletin] FAQ.txt [the list of Frequently Asked Questions] lfgbib.text [the LFG bibliography] To get a file, send a message to LISTSERV@listserv.linguistlist.org containing the following command: get <filename> For example, if you want to get the latest version of the FAQ, you would send a message to LISTSERV@listserv.linguistlist.org with the following command: get FAQ.txt You will receive the file in an email message.