Path: utzoo!attcan!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!ucbvax!cs.rpi.edu!nl-kr-request From: nl-kr-request@cs.rpi.edu (NL-KR Moderator Chris Welty) Newsgroups: comp.ai.nlang-know-rep Subject: NL-KR Digest, Volume 6 No. 36 Message-ID: <8909111739.AA10090@fs3.cs.rpi.edu> Date: 11 Sep 89 17:39:43 GMT Sender: daemon@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU Reply-To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu (NL-KR Digest) Organization: The Internet Lines: 681 Approved: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu NL-KR Digest (Mon Sep 11 13:33:39 1989) Volume 6 No. 36 Today's Topics: belief representation Planning and Scheduling Reference Requested Re: Planning and Scheduling Reference Requested BELIEFS Connectionist NLP locating a paper Morphological analyzers; Hebrew; English? ACL 1990 Call for Papers: 6-9 June 1990, Pittsburgh International workshop on Inheritance in NLP CFP: 6th IEEE Conference on AI Applications Submissions: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu Requests, policy: nl-kr-request@cs.rpi.edu Back issues are available from host archive.cs.rpi.edu [128.213.1.10] in the files nl-kr/Vxx/Nyy (ie nl-kr/V01/N01 for V1#1), mail requests will not be promptly satisfied. If you can't reach `cs.rpi.edu' you may want to use `turing.cs.rpi.edu' instead. ----------------------------------------------------------------- To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu >From: mcvax!irst.it!basso@uunet.UU.NET ( Basso Andrea) Newsgroups: comp.ai,comp.ai.nlang-know-rep Subject: belief representation Date: 8 Sep 89 13:39:37 GMT I am working on the development of a system for belief representation and manipulation. I would be interested in communicating with other researcheres working in this area. I would appreciate any response. -Andrea ANDREA BASSO IRST (Istituto per la Ricerca Scientifica e Tecnologica) 38050 Povo di Trento TRENTO (ITALY) e-mail adresses: basso@irst.it basso@irst.uucp ..!mcvax!i2unix!irst!basso basso%irst@uunet.uu.net (from ARPA) ------------------------------ To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu >From: deale@aurora.laic.uucp (Michael Deale) Newsgroups: comp.ai Subject: Planning and Scheduling Reference Requested Keywords: Planning, Scheduling Date: 25 Aug 89 20:27:46 GMT I have a article titled: AI Planning: A Tutorial and Review it is by Mark Drummond, and Austin Tate. Austin Tate is referenced in the bibliography as working on a system named O-PLAN... There are a number of such references to this system, and I am looking for more information on his work... Unfortunately most of the published papers are European, and difficult to find in the local libraries... I have tried Stanford's library, and only found one of the references. Does anyone know how to get in touch with the folks working on O-PLAN, or where to get thier papers in the San Francisco Bay Area. Thanks for any help you can provide. MJD ------------------------------ To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu >From: roberto@aiai.uucp (Roberto Desimone) Newsgroups: comp.ai Subject: Re: Planning and Scheduling Reference Requested Keywords: Planning, Scheduling Date: 31 Aug 89 10:41:47 GMT Reply-To: roberto@aiai.uucp (Roberto Desimone) In article <689@laic.UUCP> deale@aurora.laic.uucp (Michael Deale) writes: > >Does anyone know how to get in touch with the folks working on O-PLAN, >or where to get thier papers in the San Francisco Bay Area. We have since been in touch with Michael Deale concerning our work on the O-Plan project. Most of the previous publications on O-Plan describe earlier versions of the system. However, there are more recent papers, including a more definitive paper about O-Plan, which is currently being reveiwed for publication. This is available from AIAI: O-Plan: the Open Planning Architecture Currie, K.W. and Tate, A. Submitted for publication. Also available as AIAI-TR-67. Another paper, on search space pruning within O-Plan using a technique called 'Temporal Coherence' was presented at IJCAI-89, jointly authored by Mark Drummond (ex-AIAI), now of NASA Ames, AI Research Center, and Ken Currie of AIAI. O-Plan is being further developed as part of a 3 year research contract funded by the USAF, co-ordinated by RADC, on "Spacecraft Command and Control using AI Planning techniques" which began in July 1989. The research, in particular, addresses the issue of closing the loop between plan generation and executing monitoring in the face of simple plan failures. This project is includes the doctoral work done by Brian Drabble, now at AIAI, on EXCALIBUR. This integrates qualitative reasoning techniques with existing non-linear planning research to tackle the tasks of plan execution monitoring and repair. See AIAI-TR-56. For more details about O-Plan and our other planning and scheduling research work, please get in touch with us at the following address: AI Applications Institute (AIAI) University of Edinburgh 80 South Bridge Edinburgh EH1 1HN Tel: +44 31 225-4464 Fax: +44 31 226-2730 or e-mail one of the following Ken Currie k.currie%uk.ac.ed@nsfnet-relay.ac.uk Roberto Desimone r.desimone%uk.ac.ed@nsfnet-relay.ac.uk Brian Drabble b.drabble%uk.ac.ed@nsfnet-relay.ac.uk Roberto Desimone Knowledge-Based Planning Group (KBPG) at AIAI ------------------------------ To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu >From: mcvax!irst.it!basso@uunet.UU.NET ( Basso Andrea) Newsgroups: comp.ai,comp.ai.nlang-know-rep Subject: BELIEFS Date: 8 Sep 89 20:15:18 GMT I am working on the development of a system for belief representation and manipulation.I would be interested in communicating with other researcheres working in this area. I would appreciate any response. -Andrea ANDREA BASSO IRST (Istituto per la Ricerca Scientifica e Tecnologica) 38050 Povo di Trento TRENTO (ITALY) e-mail adresses: basso@irst.it basso@irst.uucp ..!mcvax!i2unix!irst!basso basso%irst@uunet.uu.net (from ARPA) ------------------------------ To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu >From: munnari!ait.trl.OZ.AU!jacob@uunet.UU.NET (Jacob Cybulski) Newsgroups: comp.ai.nlang-know-rep Subject: Connectionist NLP Date: 28 Aug 89 01:03:44 GMT > I would like to know a little more about what the group around > George Lakoff is doing w.r.t. the link between cognitive linguistics > and connectionism. Does anybody have any recent references on the connectionist approach to natural language understanding? It does not have to be related to George Lakoff work afterall! Any information would be appreciated. Thank you Jacob o | o \_/ ------------------------------ To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu >From: sutton@comp.lancs.ac.uk (Steve Sutton) Newsgroups: comp.ai,sci.lang Subject: locating a paper Date: 25 Aug 89 16:15:31 GMT Reply-To: sutton@dcl-cs.UUCP (Steve Sutton) I am trying to locate the following paper :- 'Some effects of syntactic context upon lexical access.' Prather, P and Swinney, D. 1977. [Presented at a meeting of the American Psychological Association.] Can anyone send me a copy or offer more information on locating it? Thanks in advance, - - JANET: sutton@uk.ac.lancs.comp | POST: University of Lancaster, UUCP: ...!mcvax!ukc!dcl-cs!sutton | Department of Computing, ARPA: sutton@comp.lancs.ac.uk | Bailrigg, PHONE: +44 524 65201 Ext. 3796 | Lancaster, LA1 4YR FAX: +44 524 381707 | UNITED KINGDOM ------------------------------ To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu Date: Thu, 31 Aug 89 12:37:14 -0400 >From: choueka@thunder.bellcore.com (Yaacov Choueka) Subject: Morphological analyzers; Hebrew; English? Following is an abstract of a talk to be given soon at a meeting on Computational Linguistics in Haifa, Israel. I would be grateful for any information on the questions raised at the end of this abstract. Yaacov Choueka, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel. choueka@bimacs.bitnet Now visiting Bellcore, NJ, till 09/14, choueka@thunder.bellcore.com ================================================================ "MILIM" (WORDS) A complete and accurate morphological analyzer for modern Hebrew for a PC environment Yaacov Choueka (1,2) Yoni Neeman (2) 1) Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel. 2) Center for Educational Technology, Ramat Aviv, Tel-Aviv. ============================= As a typical semitic language, Hebrew has a rather complex morphology. A verb can be conjugated in several modes, tenses, persons and genders; causative pronouns can be suffixed and combinations of prepositions can be prefixed to the conjugated form, bringing the total number of morphological variants of one verb to a few thousand variants. Similar considerations apply also to nominal forms. No adequate natural language processing systems (such as spelling checkers, full-text retrieval systems, mechanical translation software, etc.) can be therefore developed for Hebrew without a morphological analyzer operating in the background. "MILIM" is a portable morphological analyzer for modern Hebrew developed for the PC environment. It accepts as input any string of characters and produces as output a complete and linguistically accurate analysis of that string, giving the lemma (=basic form, standard dictionary entry), the root and all relevant morphological attributes, such as (for verbs): mode, tense, person and gender, attached pronouns and prepositions, etc. If the given word has several possible analyses, it will list them all. Based on a carefully coded dictionary and a computerized version of the Hebrew morphology, MILIM will correctly recognize and analyze any linguistically legitimate entity, including "exceptions" and "irregular" cases. MILIM processes non-pointed Hebrew, and can recognize both grammatical spelling ("ktiv hasser") as well as "plene" one ("ktiv male"). It also recognizes common non-linguistic textual entities such as abbreviations, acronyms, proper names of places and people, etc. Its response time is immediate, and it requires less than 2 MB of internal and disk memory. A VAX/VMS version is also available. ========================================================================h Questions: Is there such a package for English, that can be attached to any natural language processing system running on a PC or a VAX? I am not interested in suffix-stripping routines, stemming algorithms, approximate solutions, and the like. I am asking about the availability of a package that can be called from some specified operating system environment (much as "spell" is used in Unix), and given a string, will output its linguistically correct analyses, and specially a pointer to its dictionary entry (so that all of the information attached to this entry in any computerized dictionary - including word senses, quotations, collocations, etc.,- can then be made available), as in the following examples: saw--- 1. past of (to) see, transitive verb,... 2. noun, singular, ... 3. tr. verb ... 4. in. verb... . . saws-- 1. plural of saw, noun,... Obviously such a tool will be closely tied to a given dictionary and will be no more comprehensive or "correct" than its dictionary base, but that's OK. A good extra bonus can be some marking of the dictionary entries that will enable their grouping together into morphologically and semantically related "families" or "roots". The following different dictionary entries will be labeled for example as belonging to the same "family": computer, computation, computational, (to) compute, (to) computerize, etc... Note that this notion is not related in any way to synonymity: "calculation" will not be in the family just mentioned. I am also not interested in such products if they are proprietary or not available for purchase at a "reasonable" fee, or if they are strongly attached to one specific application. Is such a tool available now (or will be very soon)? Thanks! ------------------------------ To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu Date: Tue, 5 Sep 89 11:48:57 EDT >From: walker@flash.bellcore.com (Donald E Walker) Subject: ACL 1990 Call for Papers: 6-9 June 1990, Pittsburgh CALL FOR PAPERS 28th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics 6-9 June 1990 University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania TOPICS OF INTEREST: Papers are invited on substantial, original, and unpublished research on all aspects of computational linguistics, including, but not limited to, pragmatics, discourse, semantics, syntax, and the lexicon; phonetics, phonology, and morphology; interpreting and generating spoken and written language; linguistic, mathematical, and psychological models of language; machine translation and translation aids; natural language interfaces; message understanding systems; and theoretical and applications papers of every kind. REQUIREMENTS: Papers should describe unique work; they should emphasize completed work rather than intended work; and they should indicate clearly the state of completion of the reported results. A paper accepted for presentation at the ACL Meeting cannot be presented at another conference. FORMAT FOR SUBMISSION: Authors should submit twelve copies of preliminary versions of their papers, not to exceed 3200 words (exclusive of references). The title page should include the title, the name(s) of the author(s), complete addresses, a short (5 line) summary, and a specification of the topic area. Submissions that do not conform to this format will not be reviewed. Send to: Robert C. Berwick ACL-90 Program Chair MIT AI Laboratory, Room 838 545 Technology Square Cambridge, MA 02139 USA (+1 617)253-8918 berwick@wheaties.ai.mit.edu SCHEDULE: Final papers are due by 16 December 1989. Authors will be notified of acceptance by 3 February 1990. Camera-ready copies of final papers prepared in a double-column format, preferably on laser-printer output must be received by 7 April 1990, along with a signed copyright release statement. OTHER ACTIVITIES: The meeting will include a program of tutorials organized by Dan Flickinger, Hewlett-Packard Research Laboratories, 1501 Page Mill Road, Palo Alto, CA 94304, USA; (+1 415)857-8789; flickinger@hp.com. Anyone wishing to arrange an exhibit or present a demonstration should send a brief description together with a specification of physical requirements (space, power, telephone connections, tables, etc.) to Rich Thomason at the address below. CONFERENCE INFORMATION: Local arrangements are being handled by Rich Thomason, Intelligent Systems Program, Cathedral of Learning 1004, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, USA; (+1 412)624-5791; thomason@cad.cs.cmu.edu. For other information on the conference and on the ACL more generally, contact Don Walker (ACL), Bellcore, MRE 2A379, 445 South Street, Box 1910, Morristown, NJ 07960-1910, USA; (+1 201)829-4312; walker@flash.bellcore.com or bellcore!walker. PROGRAM COMMITTEE: Robert Berwick, David Israel, Karen Jensen, Aravind Joshi, Richard Larson, Paul Martin, Kathy McKeown, Martha Pollack, James Pustejovsky, Edward Stabler, Hans Uszkoreit, David Weir. ------------------------------ To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu X-Delivery-Notice: SMTP MAIL FROM does not correspond to sender. Date: Fri, 8 Sep 89 11:38:49 +0200 >From: walter%KUB.NL@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU Subject: International workshop on Inheritance in NLP FIRST CALL FOR PARTICIPATION INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON INHERITANCE IN NATURAL LANGUAGE PROCESSING Institute for Language Technology and AI Tilburg University The Netherlands Thursday 16 - Saturday 18 August, 1990 (Between ECAI and COLING) Organized by Walter Daelemans (Institute for Language Technology and AI, Tilburg University) Gerald Gazdar (School of Cognitive & Computing Sciences, University of Sussex) Program Committee: Jo Calder, University of Edinburgh Walter Daelemans, Tilburg University Koenraad De Smedt, University of Nijmegen Roger Evans, University of Sussex Gerald Gazdar, University of Sussex Keynote Speaker: Richmond H. Thomason, University of Pittsburgh Description: Structure sharing by inheritance in frame-based and object-oriented programming languages has been used for the representation of linguistic knowledge since the mid seventies. At first for the representation of semantic and world knowledge, later also for the representation of other types of linguistic knowledge. Capturing the meaning of the non-monotonic and default reasoning that is promoted by inheritance has been the subject of various extensions of logic. Recently, some linguistic theories have incorporated a form of inheritance explicitly into their theoretical framework (e.g. Word Grammar and HPSG). The aim of the workshop is to bring together linguists, AI-researchers and logicians interested in the application of the concept of inheritance to natural language processing. Topics: Some of the topics that will be discussed (confined to a linguistic context) are the following: - Applications of inheritance to linguistic description. - The theoretical linguistic status of different types of inheritance (single, multiple, class inheritance, delegation). - Semantics of inheritance systems. - Symbolic and subsymbolic (connectionist, genetic search) approaches to the learning of inheritance hierarchies. Format: To encourage interaction, the workshop will be limited to about 30 people, the majority of which will present a paper on their work. Attendance is by invitation. Please submit 5 hardcopies of an extended abstract to Walter Daelemans, describing work to be presented at the workshop. Deadlines: March 31, 1990: Extended abstracts due May 31, 1990: Notification of acceptance For more information, please contact: Walter Daelemans ITK, Tilburg University Email: walter@kub.nl P.O. Box 90153 ...!hp4nl!kubix!walter NL-5000 LE Tilburg Telephone: +31 13 663070 The Netherlands Fax: +31 13 663019 ------------------------------ To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu Date: Mon, 11 Sep 89 12:26:00 -0400 >From: finin@PRC.Unisys.COM Subject: CFP: 6th IEEE Conference on AI Applications CALL FOR PARTICIPATION The Sixth IEEE Conference on Artificial Intelligence Applications Fess Parker's Red Lion Resort Santa Barbara, California March 5-9, 1990 Sponsored by: The Computer Society of IEEE The conference is devoted to the application of artificial intelligence techniques to real-world problems. Two kinds of papers are appropriate: Case studies of knowledge-based applications that solve significant problems and stimulate the development of useful techniques. Papers on AI techniques and principles that underlie knowledge-based systems, and in turn, enable ever more ambitious real-world applications. This conference provides a forum for such synergy between applications and AI techniques. Papers describing significant unpublished results are solicited along three tracks: - "Engineering/Manufacturing" Track. Contributions stemming from the general area of industrial and scientific applications. - "Business/Decision Support" Track. Contributions stemming from the general area of business, law and various decision support applications. Papers in these two application tracks must: (1) Justfy the use of the AI technique, based on the problem definition and an analysis of the application's requirements; (2) Explain how AI technology was used to solve a significant problem; (3) Describe the status of the implementation; (4) Evaluate both the effectiveness of the implementation and the technique used. - "Enabling Technology" Track. Contributions focusing on techniques and principles that facilitate the development of practical knowledge based systems, and can be scaled to handle increasing problem complexity. Topics include, but not limited to: knowledge acquisition, representation, reasoning, searching, learning, software life cycle issues, consistency maintenance, verification/validation, project management, the user interface, integration, problem- solving architectures, and general tools. Papers should be limited to 5000 words. The first page of the paper should contain the following information (where applicable) in the order shown: - Title. - Authors' names and affiliation. (specify student) - Abstract: A 200 word abstract that includes a clear statement on what the original contribution is and what new lesson is imparted by the paper. - AI topic: Knowledge acquisition, explanation, diagnosis, etc. - Domain area: Mechanical design, factory scheduling, education, medicine, etc. Do NOT specify the track. - Language/Tool: Underlying language and knowledge engineering tools. - Status: development and deployment status as appropriate. - Effort: Person-years of effort put into developing the particular aspect of the project being described. - Impact: A 20 word description of estimated or measured (specify) benefit of the application developed. Each paper accepted for publication will be allotted seven pages in the conference proceedings. Best papers accepted in the Enabling Technology track will be considered for a special issue of IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering (TDKE) to appear in late 1990. Best papers accepted in the application tracks will be considered for a special issue of IEEE EXPERT, also to appear in late 1990. In addition, there will be a best student paper award of $1,500, sponsored by IBM for this conference. In addition to papers, we will be accepting the following types of submissions: - Proposals for Panel discussions. Topic and desired participants. Indicate the membership of the panel and whether you are interested in organizing/moderating the discussion. A panel proposal should include a 1000-word summary of the proposed subject. - Proposals for Demonstrations. Videotape and/or description of a live presentation (not to exceed 1000 words). The demonstration should be of a particular system or technique that shows the reduction to practice of one of the conference topics. The demonstration or video tape should be not longer than 15 minutes. - Proposals for Tutorial Presentations. Proposals of both an introductory and advanced nature are requested. Topics should relate to the management and technical development of usable and useful artificial intelligence applications. Particularly of interest are tutorials analyzing classes of applications in depth and techniques appropriate for a particular class of applications. However, all topics will be considered. Tutorials are three hours in duration; copies of slides are to be provided in advance to IEEE for reproduction. Each tutorial proposal should include the following: * Detailed topic list and extended abstract (about 3 pages) * Tutorial level: introductory, intermediate, or advanced * Prerequisite reading for intermediate and advanced tutorials * Short professional vita including presenter's experience in lectures and tutorials. - Proposals for Vendor Presentations: A separate session will be held where vendors will have the opportunity to give an overview to their AI-based software products and services. IMPORTANT DATES - September 29, 1989: Six copies of Papers, and four copies of all the proposals are due. Submissions not received by that date will be returned unopened. Electronically transmitted materials will not be accepted. - October 30, 1989: Author notifications mailed. - December 12, 1989: Accepted papers due to IEEE. Accepted tutorial notes due to Tutorial Chair, Donald Kosy - March 5-6, 1990: Tutorials - March 7-9, 1990: Conference Submit Papers and Other Materials to: Se June Hong (Room 31-206) IBM T.J. Watson Research Center P.O. Box 218 Yorktown Heights, NY 10598 USA Phone: (914)-945-2265 CSNET: HONG@IBM.COM FAX: (914)-945-2141 TELEX: 910-240-0632 Submit Tutorial Proposals to: Donald Kosy Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213 Phone: 412-268-8814 ARPANET: kosy@cs.cmu.edu CONFERENCE COMMITTEES General Chair Mark S. Fox, Carnegie-Mellon University Publicity Chair Jeff Pepper, Carnegie Group Inc Tutorial Chair Donald Kosy, Carnegie Mellon University Program Committee Chair Se June Hong, IBM Research At-large Jan Aikins, AION Corp. John Gero, University of Sidney Robert E. Filman, IntelliCorp Gary Kahn, Carnegie Group John Mc Dermott, DEC Engineering/Manufacturing Track Chair Chris Tong, Rutgers University (Visiting IBM) Sanjaya Addanki, IBM Research Alice Agogino, UC Berkeley Miro Benda, Boeing Computer Services Sanjay Mittal, Xerox PARC Duvurru Sriram, MIT Business/Decision Support Track Chair Peter Hart, Syntelligence Chidanand Apte, IBM Research Vasant Dhar, New York University Richard Fikes, Price-Waterhouse Timothy Finin, Unisys Paoli Research Center Daniel O'Leary, University of Southern California Enabling Technology Track Chair Howard Shrobe, Symbolics Lee Erman, CIMFLEX-Teknowledge Brian Gaines, University of Calgary Eric Mays, IBM Research Kathy McKeown, Columbia University Katia Sycara, Carnegie-Mellon University Additional Information For registration and additional conference information, contact: CAIA-90 The Computer Society of the IEEE 1730 Massachusetts Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20036-1903 Phone: 202-371-0101 ------------------------------ End of NL-KR Digest *******************