Corpora: CFP: 14th CUNY Conference on Human Sentence Processing

From: Anoop Sarkar (anoop@linc.cis.upenn.edu)
Date: Sat Oct 21 2000 - 19:18:17 MET DST

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                                  CALL FOR ABSTRACTS

                                      CUNY 2001

          ******************************************************************

                            We are pleased to announce the

                              14th annual meeting of the

                    CUNY Conference on Human Sentence Processing

                to be held in Philadelphia, PA, March 15 - 17, 2001.

          ******************************************************************
        
                            ------ Hosted by -------

                The Institute for Research in Cognitive Science (IRCS)
                              University of Pennsylvania
            
                            Philadelphia, PA 19104-6228
            
              ***********************************************************

               ABSTRACT DEADLINE (PAPERS AND POSTERS): December 1, 2000
            
              ***********************************************************

    CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: GENERAL SESSIONS
    **************************************

            The 14th Annual CUNY Conference on Human Sentence Processing is
    soliciting abstracts for papers and posters presenting theoretical,
    experimental, and/or computational research on any aspect of human sentence
    processing. Abstracts will be reviewed anonymously, and will be considered
    for the general conference sessions.

    CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: SPECIAL SESSION
    *************************************

            The special session for this year's conference will be
    "World-Situated Language Use: Bridging the Language-as-Product and
    Language-as-Action Traditions." This special session will encourage
    presentation of work that emphasizes language use in interactive
    conversational settings. Invited speakers for this session include Michael
    Tanenhaus, from the University of Rochester, Susan Brennan from SUNY Stony
    Brook, Boaz Keysar from the University of Chicago, Matthew Stone from
    Rutgers University, and Justine Cassell from MIT.

            In addition to these speakers, we are encouraging abstract
    submissions on this topic for presentation during this session. We are
    especially interested in experimental studies focusing on contextual
    coordination in production and comprehension as well as computational and
    linguistic theorizing on these issues (e.g., dynamic semantics, discourse
    theories of reference) and any research (psycholinguistic, linguistic or
    computational) that seeks to coordinate language use with real-world
    reference to objects or actions (e.g., as in instructions). Abstracts
    submitted for the special session will be reviewed in the same way as
    general submissions, with the added consideration of whether the
    presentation belongs in the special or general session.

    WHAT TO SUBMIT IN YOUR ABSTRACT
    *******************************

         For all submissions, the abstract text should be no longer than 1 page
    total (maximum of 500 words). In addition, you may include examples, data
    summaries, and references; however the latter, together, should not exceed
    15 lines.

          At the VERY TOP of the abstract, please include the names and
    affiliations of all authors, and the email address of the author who will
    handle correspondence. Also indicate whether you wish your abstract to be
    considered for PAPER ONLY, POSTER ONLY, or PAPER OR POSTER. This category
    means that you would be willing to present your work as a poster should the
    abstract not be accepted for the spoken paper sessions. Please also
    indicate whether you want your abstract to be considered for the SPECIAL
    SESSION. This category does not exclude the possibility of acceptance for
    the general sessions and does not decrease the chances of its acceptance.
    Please leave several blank lines between this information and the abstract
    proper (title and text), to facilitate anonymous review.

    HOW TO SUBMIT ABSTRACTS
    ***********************

            We will accept e-mail submissions ONLY. These should be addressed
    to: cuny2001@ircs.upenn.edu. Please use plain text, and use the
    subject header: "Abstract"

            If you submit more than one abstract, each must be mailed
    separately (and each will be acknowledged separately). The conference
    organizers reserve the right to shift some presentations from talks to
    posters if two or more accepted talks are from the same author.

    *************************************************************************

                       LOCAL ORGANIZING COMMITTEE INCLUDES

                 John Trueswell, Aravind Joshi, and Lila Gleitman
            

    ADDRESS FOR ALL CORRESPONDENCE: cuny2001@ircs.upenn.edu

    WEB ADDRESS: http://www.ircs.upenn.edu/cuny2001

    **************************************************************************



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