[TYPES/announce] ESSLLI 2009 Bordeaux: Program and Call for Participation
Richard Moot
richard.moot at labri.fr
Thu May 28 13:32:22 EDT 2009
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ESSLLI
Monday, 20 July -- Friday, 31 July 2009
Bordeaux, France
Program and Call for Participation
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The European Summer School in Logic, Language and Information (ESSLLI)
is organized every year by the Association for Logic, Language and
Information (FoLLI, http://www.folli.org) in different sites around
Europe.
The main focus of ESSLLI is on the interface between linguistics,
logic and computation. ESSLLI offers foundational, introductory and
advanced courses, as well as workshops, covering a wide variety of
topics within the three areas of interest: Language and Computation,
Language and Logic, and Logic and Computation.
Previous summer schools have been highly successful, attracting up to
500 students from Europe and elsewhere. The school has developed into
an important meeting place and forum for discussion for students and
researchers interested in the interdisciplinary study of Logic,
Language and Information.
*** Registration ***
Registration fees are 350 euros for master's/PhD student and 500 euros
for other partipants.
Registration closes on July the 1st. On-site registration will not be
possible. You can register online at our website.
http://esslli2009.labri.fr/reg.php
*Registration deadline*: 1st of July 2009
*** Program ***
* Evening Lecturers *
- Anne Abeille (Laboratoire de Linguistique Formelle, Universite Paris
7)
- Nick Chater (University College London)
- Bruno Courcelle (LaBRI, Universite de Bordeaux)
- Yiannis N. Moschovakis (University of California, Los Angeles)
* First Week * (20 - 24th of July, 2009)
9:15 - 10:45
* Non-deterministic Multi-valued Logics - Arnon Avron and Beata
Konikowska (Introductory course, Logic and Computation)
* Introduction to Abstract Categorial Grammars: Foundations and main
properties - Philippe de Groote and Sylvain Salvati (Introductory
course, Language and Logic)
* An introduction to minimalist grammars - Greg Kobele and Jens
Michaelis (Advanced course, Language and Computation)
* Ontology Modelling Languages - Markus Kroetzsch and Sebastian
Rudolph (Foundational course, Logic and Computation)
* The Logic of Sense and Reference - Reinhard Muskens (Foundational
course, Language and Logic)
* The mental lexicon, blueprint of the dictionaries of tomorrow:
linguistic, computational and psychological aspects of a highly
valuable resource - Michael Zock (Introductory course, Language and
Computation)
10:45 - 11:00
Coffee Break
11:00 - 12:30
* How to do things with words: Speech Acts in Linguistics, Philosophy
and Computation - Regine Eckardt and Magda Schwager(Advanced course,
Language and Logic)
* Temporal logics for specification and verification - Valentin
Goranko (Introductory course, Logic and Computation)
* Logics of individual and collective intentionality - Andreas Herzig
and Emiliano Lorini (Introductory course, Logic and Computation)
* Quotation and the semantics of speech reports - Emar Maier
(Introductory course, Language and Logic)
* Grammaticality Judgements as Linguistic Evidence - Brian Murphy
(Introductory course, Language and Computation)
* The Foundations of Statistics: A Simulation-Based Approach - Shravan
Vasishth (Foundational course, Language and Computation)
Lunch Break
14:15 - 15:45
* Logical Methods for Social Concepts - Andreas Herzig and Emiliano
Lorini (Workshop, Logic and Computation)
* Game semantics and its applications - Andrzej Murawski (Advanced
course, Logic and Computation)
* Parsing with Categorial Grammars - Gerald Penn (Workshop, Language
and Computation)
* Reasoning in complex theories and applications - Viorica Sofronie-
Stokkermans (Advanced course, Logic and Computation)
* Focus, Focus Interpretation, and Focus Sensitivity - Malte
Zimmermann and Daniel Hole (Introductory course, Language and Logic)
* Plurality and distributivity across language(s) and logic(s) - Eytan
Zweig and George Tsoulas (Advanced course, Language and Logic)
15:45 - 17:15
Student Session
17:15 - 18:45
* Theoretical and Empirical Perspectives on Discourse - Nicolas Asher
(Advanced course, Language and Logic)
* Logicality and Invariance - Denis Bonnay (Introductory course,
Language and Logic)
* Games, Action and Social Software - Jan van Eijck and Rineke
Verbrugge (Introductory course, Logic and Computation)
* Vagueness in Communication - Manfred Krifka (Workshop, Language and
Logic)
* Computational Psycholinguistics - Roger Levy (Advanced course,
Language and Computation)
* Structures and Deduction 2009 - Michel Parigot and Lutz Strassburger
(Workshop, Logic and Computation)
* Week-End * (25 - 26th of July, 2009)
14th conference on Formal Grammar - FG 2009
* Second Week * (27 - 31st of July, 2009)
9:15 - 10:45
* Ontologies: Structuring, Modularity and Heterogeneity - Stefano
Borgo and Oliver Kutz (Advanced course, Logic and Computation)
* Meaning Composition: Empricial Problems and Formal Solutions -
Louise McNally (Foundational course, Language and Logic)
* Logics of Rational Agency (Pacuit)
* Psycho-computational issues in Morphology Learning and Processing -
Vito Pirrelli (Advanced course, Language and Computation)
* Standard XML query languages for natural language processing -
Ulrich Schaefer (Introductory course, Language and Computation)
* Topics in the Semantics of Interrogative Clauses - Benjamin Spector
and Marta Abrusan (Introductory course, Language and Logic)
10:45 - 11:00
Coffee Break
11:00 - 12:30
* Computational Lexical Semantics - Gemma Boleda and Stefan Evert
(Introductory course, Language and Computation)
* Case, Scrambling and Default Word Order - Miriam Butt and Heike
Zinsmeister (Foundational course, Language and Computation)
* Event Semantics and Adverbial Modification - Berit Gehrke and Boban
Arsenijevic (Introductory course, Language and Logic)
* Reasoning with Probabilities - Eric Pacuit and Joshua Sack (Advanced
course, Logic and Computation)
* Logics with Counting - Ian Pratt-Hartmann (Advanced course, Logic
and Computation)
* Proof-Theoretic Semantics - Peter Schroeder-Heister (Advanced
course, Language and Logic)
12:30 - 14:15
Lunch Break
14:15 - 15:45
* Dynamic Logics for Interactive Belief Revision - Alexandru Baltag
and Sonja Smets (Advanced course, Logic and Computation)
* Advances in Abstract Categorial Grammars: Language theory and
linguistic modeling - Makoto Kanazawa and Sylvain Pogodalla (Advanced
course, Language and Logic)
* Intelligent Computer-Assisted Language Learning: An introduction to
an emerging interdisciplinary field - Detmar Meurers (Introductory
course, Language and Computation)
* Linguistic Information Visualization - Gerald Penn and Sheelagh
Carpendale (Advanced course, Language and Computation)
* New Directions in the Theory of Presupposition - Daniel Rothschild
and Nathan Klinedinst (Workshop, Language and Logic)
* Syntax and Semantics from an Algebraic Perspective - Edward Stabler
and Edward Keenan (Introductory course, Language and Logic)
15:45 - 17:15
Student Session
17:15 - 18:45
* Logics and Agent Programming Languages - Natasha Alechina and Brian
Logan (Introductory course, Logic and Computation)
* Formal approaches to sign languages - Carlo Cecchetto and Carlo
Geraci (Workshop, Language and Logic)
* Distributional Semantic Models - Theory and Empirical Results -
Stefan Evert and Alessandro Lenci (Advanced course, Language and
Computation)
* Referent Systems - Udo Klein and Markus Kracht (Advanced course,
Language and Logic)
* Corpus-Based Argument Structure - Adam Przepiorkowski (Introductory
course, Language and Computation)
* Explanation in Ontology Languages - Bijan Parsia and Thomas
Schneider (Introductory course, Logic and Computation)
*** Further Information ***
The website for ESSLLI 2009 can be found at:
http://esslli2009.labri.fr
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