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Subject: DAARC2007: Conference on Anaphora: call for participation - msg#00102

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** Call for Participation **


DAARC 2007
The 6th International Conference on
Discourse Anaphora and Anaphor Resolution
http://daarc2007.di.fc.ul.pt

Lagos, Portugal, March 29 - 30, 2007


Following the success of the previous international colloquia
on Discourse Anaphora and Anaphor Resolution at Lancaster
in 1996, 1998 and 2000, at Lisbon in 2002, and at S. Miguel in 2004,
the next colloquium in the series will be held in Lagos (Algarve),
Portugal, in 2007, on the 29 - 30th March.

The programme of DAARC2007 includes 2 invited talks, by Jos van Berkum
and by Ruslan Mitkov and his team, and 40 contributed presentations,
which reflect the most recent advances of the work on anaphora,
ranging from theoretical linguistic approaches through
psycholinguistic and cognitive work to computational modelling
of anaphor resolution.

Detailed information on the venue, accommodation and registration
can be found at: http://daarc2007.di.fc.ul.pt . February 15, 2007 is
the deadline for registration with reduced fees.


===============================================================
This is the colloquium programme:



Day 1, Thursday, March 29


8h30-9h30 Registration and check in


9h30-11h00
Room A

Matteo Negri and Milen Kouylekov
(ITC-IRST, Italy)
"Who are we talking about?" Tracking the referent in a question answering series

R. K. Rao Pattabhi*, L. Sobha* and Amit Bagga**
(*AU-KBC Research Center, India, **Ask.com, USA)
Multilingual cross-document co-referencing

Ryohei Sasano*, Daisuke Kawahara** and Sadao Kurohashi***
(*Univ of Tokyo, **NICT, ***Kyoto Univ, Japan)
Improving coreference resolution using bridging reference resolution
and automatically acquired synonyms

Room B

Andrej Kibrik* and Evgenia Prozorova**
(*Inst of Linguistics RAN, Russia, **Moscow State Univ, Russia)
Referential choice in signed and spoken languages

Alfons Maes
(Tilburg Univ, The Netherlands)
(How) do demonstratives code distance?

Olga Krasavina*, Christian Chiarcos** and Dmitri Zalmanov***
(*Humboldt Univ of Berlin, **Univ Potsdam, Germany; */***Moscow State Univ,
Russia)
Aspects of topicality in the use of demonstrative expressions in German,
English and Russian


11h00-11h30, Coffee break


11h30-12h30
Room A

Invited talk: Jos van Berkum
(Univ Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
Resolving discourse anaphors -- what can the brain tell us?


12h30-14h30 Lunch

14h30-16h00
Room A

Ekaterina Jasinskaja, Ulrike KÃlsch and JÃrg Mayer
(Univ of Potsdam, Germany)
Nuclear accent placement and other prosodic parameters as cues to
pronoun resolution

Anke Holler and Lisa Irmen
(Univ of Heidelberg, Germany)
Empirically Assessing Effects of the Right Frontier Constraint

Ralph Rose
(Gunma Prefectural Women's University, Japan)
Pronoun resolution and the influence of syntactic and semantic information
on discourse prominence

Room B

Shana Watters and Jeanette Gundel
(Univ of Minnesota, USA)
An empirical investigation of the relation between coreference and quotations:
Can a pronoun located in quotations find its referent?

Shun Shiramatsu*, Kazunori Komatani*, KÃiti Hasiday**, Tetsuya Ogata*,
Hiroshi G. Okuno* (*Kyoto Univ, **AIST, Japan)
Meaning-game-based centering model with statistical definition of utility of
referential expressions and its verification using Japanese and English corpora

Caroline Gasperin, Nikiforos Karamanis and Ruth Seal
(Univ of Cambridge, UK)
Annotation of anaphoric relations in biomedical full-text articles using
a domain-relevant scheme



16h00-16h30, Coffee break


16h30-18h00, Poster Session
Room B

Mai Zaki
(Middlesex Univ, UK)
A procedural account of demonstratives in English and Arabic:
A corpus-based study

Pinar Tufekci* and Yilmaz Kilicaslan**
(*Namik Kemal Univ, **Trakya Univ, Turkey)
A syntax-based pronoun resolution system for Turkish

Itziar Aduriz*, Klara Ceberio** and Arantza DÃaz de Ilarraza**
(*Univ of Barcelona, **Univ of The Basque Country, Spain)
Pronominal anaphora in Basque: Annotation issues

Dagmar Bittner, Natalia Gagarina, Milena KÃhnast and Insa GÃlzow
(ZAS Berlin, Germany)
Acquisition of anaphoric pronouns by German-, Russian-, and
Bulgarian-speaking children

Nguy Giang Linh and Zdenek Zabokrtsky
(Charles Univ, Czech Republic)
Rule-based approach to pronominal anaphora resolution applied on
the Prague Dependency Treebank 2.0 data

Peter Willemse
(Univ of Leuven, Belgium)
Direct and indirect anaphora and the possessee referent of prenominal
possessives in English

Javier Gutierrez-Rexach and Iker Zulaica
(The Ohio State Univ, USA)
Abstract reference and neuter demonstratives in Spanish


20h30 Colloquium dinner

Day 2, Friday, March 30

9h00-10h30
Room A

Advaith Siddharthan and Simone Teufel
(Univ of Cambridge, UK)
Whose idea was this: Deciding attribution in scientific literature

Dilek KÃÃÃk and Meltem Turhan YÃndem
(Middle East Technical Univ, Turkey)
A knowledge-poor pronoun resolution system for Turkish

Gordana Ilic Holen (Univ of Oslo, Norway)
Automatic anaphora resolution for Norwegian (ARN)

Room B

Ariel Cohen
(Ben-Gurion Univ, Israel)
Anaphora resolution as equality by default

AntÃnio Branco
(Univ of Lisbon, Portugal)
Null subjects are reflexives, not pronouns

Erik-Jan Smits, Petra Hendriks and Jennifer Spenader
(Univ of Groningen, The Netherlands)
Using very large parsed corpora and judgment data to classify
verb reflexivity


10h30-11h00, Coffee break


11h00-12h30, Poster session
Room B

Lars Hellan
(NTNU, Norway)
Representing clause-internal binding in an HPSG/LKB grammar

Nancy Hedberg*, Jeanette Gundel** and Ron Zacharski***
(*Simon Fraser Univ, **Univ of Minnesota, ***State Univ of New Mexico, USA)
Directly and indirectly anaphoric demonstrative and personal pronouns
in newspaper articles

Adrian Brasoveanu
(Univ California Santa Cruz, USA)
Structured discourse reference to individuals

Costanza Navarretta
(Univ of Copenhagen, Denmark)
A contrastive analysis of the use of abstract anaphora

Roberta Tedeschi
(UiL OTS, The Netherlands)
Clitics at the syntax-discourse interface: The case of Italian

Joanna Nykiel
(Univ of Silesia, Poland)
When syntax wonât go away: A diachronic study of verb phrase ellipsis
and sluicing.

Shigeko Nariyama
(Univ of Melbourne, Australia)
Ellipsis and markedness: Examining the meaning of ellipsis

Stefan Bott
(Univ Pompeu Fabra, Spain)
Resolving backgrounds


12h30-14h30 Lunch

14h30-15h30
Room A

Invited talk: Ruslan Mitkov, Richard Evans, Constantin Orasan,
L.A. Ha and V. Pekar
(Univ of Wolverhampton, UK)
Anaphora resolution: To what extent does it help NLP applications?


15h30-16h00, Coffee break


16h00-17h30
Room A

Frederic Landragin
(LATTICE, France)
Taking situational factors into account when resolving anaphora:
An approach based on salience and events

Eleni Miltsakaki
(Univ of Pennsylvania, USA)
A rethink of the relationship between salience and anaphora resolution

Olga Krasavina
(Humboldt Univ of Berlin, Germany and Moscow State Universtity, Russia)
A multi-factorial study of referential choice on third-person pronouns


16h00-17h30
Room B

Roland Stuckardt
(Univ. Frankfurt am Main, Germany)
Applying backpropagation networks to anaphor resolution

Davy Weissenbacher
(Univ Paris-Nord, France)
A Bayesian classifier for the recognition of impersonal it pronoun
occurrences: Description of the system

Iris Hendrickx, Veronique Hoste and Walter Daelemans
(Univ of Antwerp, Belgium)
Evaluating hybrid versus data-driven coreference resolution


17h30 Farewell






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RE: Hierarchically classified corpora?

Hello Daniel,   You may also want to consider the hierarchically classified HEP corpus. It is in English (i.e. no German texts) and not about computer science, but it is very well documented, has a good size, etc. You find it at:      http://sinai.ujaen.es/wiki/index.php/HepCorpus#English_version   Arturo Montejo Ráez (amontejo AT ujaen.es) will be happy to help you with any questions you may have. A useful feature about this corpus is that Arturo has already produced a number of benchmark values for categorisation with various methods.   Ralf     Ralf Steinberger (Ralf.Steinberger@xxxxxx) European Commission - Joint Research Centre (JRC) IPSC - SeS - Language Technology (http://langtech.jrc.it, http://press.jrc.it/NewsExplorer)  T.P. 267, Via Fermi 1 21020 Ispra (VA), Italy   -----Original Message----- > I'm working on my master thesis "Accurate Hierarchical Classification > using NLP Techniques". I hope to improve the accuracy of hierarchical > classification on English and German corpora by using additional > information extracted with aid of linguistic tools. > > I would like to ask where I can obtain corpora which are already > classified in a hierarchy. I need several English and German corpora. I > would prefer if the topics of the corpora are about linguistic or > computer science. > > Regards & Thanks, > > Daniel  

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Looking for lexicons of names

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chaker

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Call Announcement: Cognitive and Brain Sciences PhD Program at Trento University

PhD Program in Cognitive and Brain Sciences I would like to inform you of the call for admissions to the international doctoral school in Cognitive and Brain Sciences of the University of Trento. The official application may be downloaded from the following webpage: http://www.cimec.unitn.it/cobras.php. The application deadline is February 28, 2007 for the program beginning in November 2007. The PhD Program in Cognitive and Brain Sciences engages students in an integrated program of research, instruction, and professional development in cognitive neuroscience, experimental psychology (attention, perception, reasoning, language, memory, sensory processing), experimental physics, computer science, linguistics and cognitive neuropsychology. Students actively participate in international research projects, seminars, and conferences based in the Center for Mind/Brain Sciences (CIMeC - http://www.cimec.unitn.it), the Functional Imaging Laboratory (LNiF- http://www.cimec.unitn.it/lnif.php), the Language, Interaction and Computation Laboratory (LangCom - http://www.cimec.unitn.it/langcom.php) and the Center for Neurocognitive Rehabilitation (CERiN). The length of the program is three years. The language of instruction is English. Regards, Leah Mercanti PhD Program in Cognitive and Brain Sciences Universita' degli Studi di Trento Corso Bettini 31, I-38068 Rovereto, Italy Tel. +39 0464/48 3650 Fax +39 0464/48 3698 Email phd.cimec@xxxxxxxx -- Marco Baroni CIMeC, University of Trento http://www.form.unitn.it/~baroni
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