LFG BULLETIN
September/October 2020
Next issue: December 2020

CONTENTS

  1. 1. New book: "Enriched Meanings" by Ash Asudeh and Gianluca Giorgolo
  2. Drafts for comments
  3. Recent LFG work
  4. Online resources
  5. Boilerplate

1. New book: "Enriched Meanings" by Ash Asudeh and Gianluca Giorgolo

Website: https://global.oup.com/academic/product/enriched-meanings-9780198847861?cc=ca&lang=en&#

Blurp:
"This book develops a theory of enriched meanings for natural language interpretation that uses the concept of monads and related ideas from category theory, a branch of mathematics that has been influential in theoretical computer science and elsewhere. Certain expressions that exhibit complex effects at the semantics/pragmatics boundary live in an enriched meaning space, while others live in a more basic meaning space. These basic meanings are mapped to enriched meanings only when required compositionally, which avoids generalizing meanings to the worst case. Ash Asudeh and Gianluca Giorgolo show that the monadic theory of enriched meanings offers a formally and computationally well-defined way to tackle important challenges at the semantics/pragmatics boundary. In particular, they develop innovative monadic analyses of three phenomena - conventional implicature, substitution puzzles, and conjunction fallacies - and demonstrate that the compositional properties of monads model linguistic intuitions about these cases particularly well. The analyses are accompanied by exercises to aid understanding, and the computational tools used are available on the book's companion website. The book also contains background chapters on enriched meanings and category theory. The volume is interdisciplinary in nature, with insights from semantics, pragmatics, philosophy of language, psychology, and computer science, and will appeal to graduate students and researchers from a wide range of disciplines with an interest in natural language understanding and representation."


2. Drafts for comments

'Drafts for comments' offers bulletin readers the opportunity to submit information about drafts or projects on which they would like to receive comments from the community. This brings work in progress to the attention of the community and plays some of the role that previous incarnations of the archive played.

Please submit basic article/project information and (a) a URL if the item is available online or else (b) your contact email.

3. Recent LFG work

Send details of your recent work to < LFG.bulletin "at" gmail "dot" com >

Conference Proceedings

LFG conference papers are available electronically at: http://cslipublications.stanford.edu/LFG/


4. Online Resources


5. Boilerplate

The boilerplate (standard text) which previously appeared at the end of every bulletin can be accessed at:
http://web.kim.uni-konstanz.de/Bulletin/boilerplate.html"

The LFG website also serves much of the same function as the boilerplate section.