Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rpi!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!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 8 No. 28 Message-ID: <9106031930.AA12214@sirius.cs.rpi.edu> Date: 3 Jun 91 19:30:12 GMT Sender: daemon@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU Reply-To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu (NL-KR Digest) Distribution: world Organization: The Internet Lines: 578 Approved: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu NL-KR Digest (Mon Jun 3 13:33:53 1991) Volume 8 No. 28 Today's Topics: AI SEMINAR: Ted Briscoe Natural language parsing using ATN's Language parsing and NLP for pascal/c objects perspectives books and articles on expert system related to Network Management help in learning powerhouse *** ECAI'92 *** CALL FOR PAPERS (plain text version) CILS Calendar CSLI Colloquium, Thursday, 23 May, 4:15 p.m., Cordura 100 AI Seminar: John Nerbonne, May 27 Submissions: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu Requests, policy: nl-kr-request@cs.rpi.edu Back issues are available from host archive.cs.rpi.edu [128.213.10.18] 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. BITNET subscribers: we now have a LISTSERVer for nl-kr. You may send submissions to NL-KR@RPIECS and any listserv-style administrative requests to LISTSERV@RPIECS. [ Sorry for the delay getting out this issue, end of semester and all that implies... CW ] ----------------------------------------------------------------- To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu >From: Marie Meteer Subject: AI SEMINAR: Ted Briscoe Date: Mon, 3 Jun 91 08:56:52 EDT Mail-System-Version: BBN Science Development Program AI Seminar Series Lecture GENERALISED PROBABILISTIC LR PARSING OF NATURAL LANGUAGE (CORPORA) WITH UNIFICATION-BASED GRAMMARS TED BRISCOE John Carroll Computer Laboratory Cambridge University Ted.Briscoe@computer-lab.cambridge.ac.uk BBN, 2nd floor large conference room 10 Moulton St, Cambridge MA, 02138 Wednesday, June 12th, 1990, 10:30 AM We describe work towards the construction of a very wide-coverage probabilistic parsing system for natural language (NL), based on LR parsing techniques. The system is intended to rank the large number of syntactic analyses produced by NL grammars according to the frequency of occurrence of the individual rules deployed in each analysis. We discuss a fully automatic procedure for constructing an LR parse table from a unification-based grammar formalism, and consider the suitability of alternative LALR(1) parse table construction methods for large grammars. The parse table is used as the basis for two parsers; a user-driven interactive system which provides a computationally tractable and labour-efficient method of supervised learning of the statistical information required to drive the probabilistic parser. The latter is constructed by associating probabilities with the LR parse table directly. This technique is superior to parsers based on probabilistic lexical tagging or probabilistic context-free grammar because it allows for a more context dependent probabilistic language model as well as use of a more linguistically adequate grammar formalism. We compare the performance of Tomita's (1987) generalised LR parsing algorithm, and some optimised variants, to an efficient chart parser. We report promising results of a pilot study training on 250 noun dictionary definitions from the Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English (LDOCE) and retesting on these plus a further 50 definitions. Finally, we discuss limitations of the current system and possible extensions to deal with lexical (syntactic and semantic) frequency of occurrence. ******************************************************* Suggestions for AI Seminar speakers are always welcome. Please e-mail suggestions to Marie Meteer (mmeteer@bbn.com) or Dan Cerys (cerys@bbn.com). ******************************************************* ------------------------------ To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu >From: falk@flip.Cayman.COM (Geoffrey Falk) Newsgroups: comp.ai,comp.compilers,comp.ai.nlang-know-rep Subject: Natural language parsing using ATN's Keywords: augmented transition networks Date: 25 May 91 19:57:37 GMT Hi all... I am working on a front-end parser for a speech synthesis system. It needs to parse English text to determine phrasing for intonation. I was told that ATNs are the way to go. Does anyone have code in C that would help illustrate the technique? Even better, is there a yacc-alike for generating ATNs from a grammar? Any help is muchly appreciated. Please reply by Email; I will summarize if there seems to be sufficient interest. Thanks in advance. Geoffrey Falk Dept. of Mathematics & Dept. of Computer Science University of Calgary Calgary, Alberta falk@flip.ucalgary.ca (NeXTMail) falk@cpsc.ucalgary.ca ------------------------------ To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu Date: Wed, 29 May 91 13:14:24 EDT >From: popkin@oswine.cs.odu.edu (Brian N. Popkin) Subject: Language parsing and NLP for pascal/c Organization: Old Dominion University, Norfolk, VA Date: Wed, 29 May 1991 17:14:07 GMT I am currently looking for nlp's and language parsers for c and pascal.. any help would be great! Thanks. Brian *-----------------------------------------------------------------------------* * Brian Popkin - Computer Science Major - Systems Programing * * Old Dominion University - Norfolk, Virginia USA * * * * Others Areas Of Interest: Artificial Intelligence, Expert Systems, * * Networks, And Telecommunications * * * * Email Address: popkin@cs.odu.edu - popkin@xanth.cs.odu.edu * ------------------------------ To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu >From: napoli@loria.crin.fr (Amedeo Napoli) Newsgroups: comp.ai.nlang-know-rep Subject: objects perspectives Date: 29 May 91 11:25:40 GMT Bonjour tout le monde, In the following paper AUTHOR = {M. Stefik and D.G. Bobrow}, TITLE = {{Object-Oriented Programming: Themes and Variations}}, JOURNAL = {The AI magazine}, VOLUME = 6, NUMBER = 4, YEAR = 1986, PAGES = {40--62}, M. Stefik and D. Bobrow present "perspectives" as a generalization of composite objects, but their description is rather short, does anyone know other references on the subject, (also from an artificial intelligence point of view i.e. objects for knowledge representation)? Thanks in advance, please send me directly the responses, I will post a summary Merci beaucoup d'avance, Amedeo NAPOLI ------------------------------ To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu Newsgroups: comp.ai.nlang-know-rep >From: vinh@tdd.sj.nec.com (Vinh Huynh) Subject: books and articles on expert system related to Network Management Nntp-Posting-Host: 131.241.5.52 Date: Tue, 21 May 1991 17:03:33 GMT I am working on a new Network Management project that utilizes an expert system(Neuron Data). I'd like to get more informations on expert systems related to this area in particular a list of books or references dealing with the following subject: 1. Introduction to Expert Systems. 2. Building Knowledge Representation for Network Management. Thank you in advance for your help. vinh@tdd.sj.nec.com ------------------------------ To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu Date: Thu, 16 May 91 20:47:23 -0700 Newsgroups: comp.ai.nlang-know-rep >From: davidd@june.cs.washington.edu (David Doll) Subject: help in learning powerhouse Organization: Univ.of Washington Computer Science & Engineering Hello, I was wondering if anybody had any experience with the powerhouse package that runs on a DEC VAX machines - or any other ones if be...I need to get ramped upto speed as quick as possible. I would appriecate any pointers and words of wisdom people may have. Could you please e-mail me.Thanks for your time and help. - - David Doll Computer Science and Engineering Univ. of Washington Seattle, WA 98195 MS: FR-35 (206) 685-3061, 543-5075 davidd@cs.washington.edu ------------------------------ To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu >From: ai-vie!paolo@relay.eu.net (paolo petta) Newsgroups: comp.ai.nlang-know-rep Subject: *** ECAI'92 *** CALL FOR PAPERS (plain text version) Date: 14 May 91 13:14:51 GMT ======================================================================= CALL FOR PAPERS - ECAI92 - CALL FOR PAPERS - ECAI92 - CALL FOR PAPERS ======================================================================= CALL FOR PAPERS 10th European Conference on Artificial Intelligence (ECAI 92) August 3-7, 1992, Vienna, Austria The European Conference on Artificial Intelligence (ECAI) is the European forum for scientific exchange and presentation of AI research. The aim of the conference is to cover all aspects of AI research and to bring together basic research and applied research. The Technical Programme will include paper presentations, invited talks, panels, workshops, and tutorials. The conference is designed to cover all subfields of AI, including non-symbolic methods. ECAIs are held in alternate years and are organized by the European Coordinating Committee for Artificial Intelligence (ECCAI). The 10th ECAI in 1992 will be hosted by the Austrian Society for Artificial Intelligence (OGAI). The conference will take place at the Vienna University of Economics and Business Administration. TOPICS OF INTEREST You are invited to submit an original research paper on any of the following subjects: - Automated Reasoning (e.g. automatic programming, reasoning with uncertainty, theorem proving, constraint satisfaction, logic programming, search) - Cognitive Modeling (e.g. models for human problem solving and information processing, memory models, computational theories in psychology) - Connectionist and PDP Models for AI (e.g. connectionist architectures, connectionist learning, neural networks applications) - Distributed AI and Multiagent Systems (e.g. distributed problem solving, distributed resource allocation, communication, cooperation) - Enabling Technology and Systems (e.g. machine architectures, AI computer languages, tools for AI system development) - Integrated Systems (e.g. integrating several AI components, embedded AI, integrating AI and conventional systems) - Knowledge Representation (e.g. terminological knowledge, nonmonotonic logic, foundations of temporal, causal and spatial reasoning, abduction, common sense, complexity of reasoning) - Machine Learning (e.g. inductive learning, knowledge intensive learning, discovery, concept formation) - Natural Language (e.g. text generation and understanding, speech understanding, syntax, semantics, discourse, representation issues, NL system architecture) - Philosophical Foundations (e.g. philosophy of mind, functionalism and AI, epistemological foundations) - Planning, Scheduling, and Reasoning about Actions (e.g. temporal and causal reasoning for planning, task scheduling, plan recognition, resource allocation) - Principles of AI Applications (e.g. generic applications, expert system design, tutoring systems, knowledge acquisition, case-based reasoning) - Reasoning about Physical Systems (e.g. modeling, model-based simulation, qualitative reasoning, diagnosis, design, monitoring, applications of causal, temporal and spatial reasoning for engineering, scientific, medical, economic problems) - Robotics (e.g. connecting perception to action, sensor-motor systems, kinematics, navigation, grasping) - Social, Economic, Legal, and Artistic Implications (e.g. AI scenarios, ethical issues, legal issues and responsibility, AI and music) - User Interfaces (e.g. intelligent graphical interfaces, natural language front ends, user models, knowledge-based information presentation, artificial reality) - Verification, Validation & Test of Knowledge-Based Systems (e.g. improving and securing consistency, completeness, reliability) - Vision and Signal Understanding (e.g. vision and perception in biological and technical systems, sensor interpretation, intelligent signal interpretation) SUBMISSION OF PAPERS Authors are requested to submit to the Programme Chairperson 5 copies of papers written in English in hardcopy format (electronic and fax submissions will not be accepted). Submitted papers must be unpublished, original work and substantially different from papers currently under review. They must not be submitted elsewhere before notification date. This restriction does not apply to workshops and similar specialized presentations with a limited audience. Papers can be either long papers (completed research: maximum 5000 words / 10 single-spaced pages) or short papers (ongoing research: maximum 2000 words / 4 pages). Each full page of figures counts as 500 words. Each paper should contain an abstract (maximum 200 words). A separate title page should include the title, the name(s) of the author(s), complete address(es), the specification of one of the above topics, and the category long or short. Papers should be printed on A4 or 8.5"x11" sized paper in letter quality print, with 12 point type (10 chars/inch on typewriter). Work described in an accepted paper may also be illustrated with a videotape or a demo. Special sessions will be scheduled for video presentations and demos. Authors wishing to show a videotape or a demo should specify the duration and the requirements of the videotape/demo when submitting their paper for review. TIMETABLE Papers must be received by the Programme Chairperson before January 17, 1992. Authors will be notified of acceptance or rejection by April 1, 1992. Final camera-ready papers must be received by May 15, 1992. WORKSHOPS Workshops are welcome at ECAI 92. They will give participants the opportunity to discuss specific technical topics in a small, informal environment, which encourages interaction and exchange of ideas. Workshop proposals should be sent to the Programme Chairperson as soon as possible, but not later than January 17, 1992. Workshop proposals should contain a brief description of the workshop and the technical issues addressed, a preliminary schedule, and the names and addresses (postal, phone, fax, e-mail) of the Organizing Committee of the workshop. The proposals will be reviewed and the organizers will be notified not later than February 28, 1992. The organizers are responsible for producing a call for participation, for reviewing requests to participate and for scheduling the workshop activities within the constraints set by the conference organizers. Workshops will be scheduled outside the main technical programme. ECAI PRIZE A prize for the best paper as determined by the Programme Committee will be awarded; the Digital Equipment Prize will also be awarded at ECAI 92. PROGRAMME CHAIRPERSON Papers, workshop proposals and all inquiries regarding the programme should be sent to the Programme Chairperson: Prof. Bernd Neumann FB Informatik University of Hamburg Bodenstedtstr.16 D-W-2000 Hamburg 50 Germany PROGRAMME COMMITTEE Luigia Carlucci Aiello, Italy Ramon Lopez de Mantaras, Spain Giuseppe Attardi, Italy David Makinson, France Wolfgang Bibel, Germany Robert Milne, United Kingdom Mike Brady, United Kingdom Katharina Morik, Germany Ivan Bratko, Yugoslavia Bernhard Nebel, Germany Alan R. Bundy, United Kingdom Wolfgang Nejdl, Austria Stephan Busemann, Germany Erkki Oja, Finland Rolf Eckmiller, Germany Eugenio Oliveira, Portugal Jan-Olof Eklundh, Sweden Domenico Parisi, Italy Boi Faltings, Switzerland Radoslav Pavlov, Bulgaria Olivier Faugeras, France Henri Prade, France Francoise Fogelman-Soulie, France Peter Raulefs, USA Christian Freksa, Germany Graeme D. Ritchie, United Kingdom Peter Gardenfors, Sweden Lorenza Saitta, Italy Volker Haarslev, Germany Erik Sandewall, Sweden Eva Hajicova, Czechoslovakia Aaron Sloman, United Kingdom Werner Horn, Austria Karen Sparck-Jones, United Kingdom Gerard Kempen, The Netherlands Sam Steel, United Kingdom Dietrich Koch, Germany Luc Steels, Belgium Yves Kodratoff, France Pietro Torasso, Italy Jan Koenderink, The Netherlands Robert Trappl, Austria Jean-Pierre Laurent, France Enn Tyugu, USSR Maurizio Lenzerini, Italy OTHER ACTIVITIES AND INQUIRIES ECAI 92 will present a set of tutorials which will focus both on AI topics from the practical perspective and on topics about emerging AI technologies. All inquiries regarding tutorials should be directed to the Tutorial Chairperson, Werner Horn, Austrian Research Institute for Artificial Intelligence, Schottengasse 3, A-1010 Vienna, Austria (tel: +43-1-53532810, fax: +43-1-630652, email: werner@ai-vie.uucp). For inquiries about registration (scientific programme and tutorials), accommodation and other local arrangements you should contact the ECAI92 Conference Office, ADV, Trattnerhof 2, A-1010 Vienna, Austria (tel: +43-1-5330913-74, fax: +43-1-5330913-77, telex: 75311178 adv a). All inquiries regarding other activities should be directed to the Local Arrangements Chairperson, Johannes Retti, Siemens AG, Abt.EK4, Goellnergasse 15, A-1030 Vienna, Austria (tel: +43-1-71711-5030, fax: +43-1-71711-5120, email: retti%siewien.uucp@relay.eu.net). - - paolo petta, paolo@ai-vie.uucp (..mcsun!tuvie!ai-vie!paolo) austrian research institute for bitnet: paolo%ai-vie.uucp@relay.eu.net artificial intelligence outside europe: paolo%ai-vie.uucp@relay.eu.net ------------------------------ To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu Subject: CILS Calendar X-Mailer: MH 6.6 #5[UCI] Date: Mon, 13 May 91 14:35:44 -0500 >From: colleen@tira.uchicago.edu [ These next few are past. - CW ] _________________ T H E C I L S C A L E N D A R ________________ The Center for Information and Language Studies Joseph Regenstein Library, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637 Subscription requests to: cils@tira.uchicago.edu ____________________________________________________________________ Vol. 1, No. 27 May 13, 1991 ~*~ Upcoming events: 5/13 14:30 Ry 277 Lecture Elizabeth A. Hinkelman, CILS 5/13 16:00 Wb 130 Workshop Pragmatics of Language 5/14 16:00 Wb 408 Workshop Mark Turner, Univ. of Maryland 6/3 16:00 Wb 130 Workshop Pragmatics of Language - ------------------------------ MONDAY, MAY 13 2:30 p.m. Elizabeth A. Hinkelman (eliz@clove.uchicago.edu) Ry 277 Center for Information and Language Studies "Software Evaluation Using The Natural Language Software Registry" Abstract in last week's calendar. ***** 4:00 p.m. Workshop Wb 130 The Pragmatics of Language Nancy Dray, Linguistics Marshall Abrams, Philosophy For more information, please contact Jerrold Sadock, Department of Linguistics (2-8524, sadock@sapir) or Josef Stern, Department of Philosophy (2-8594, j06s@midway). The final workshop of the quarter will be Monday, June 3. Speakers: Donald Breen and James Shelley, Dept. of Philosophy. _____________ TUESDAY, MAY 14 4:00 p.m. Workshop Wb 408 Language and Thought Mark Turner, Dept. of English, University of Maryland "Texts and Brains" This presentation pertains to Professor Turner's forthcoming book "Reading Minds: The Study of English in the Age of Cognitive Science," forthcoming from Princeton UP. Readings available in CL 11. For more information, please contact Paula Schiller (733-0915). New participants are welcome. - ----------- End of CILS Calendar ------------------------------ To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu Date: Fri, 17 May 91 16:34:53 PDT >From: ingrid@russell.stanford.edu (Ingrid Deiwiks) Subject: CSLI Colloquium, Thursday, 23 May, 4:15 p.m., Cordura 100 CSLI COLLOQUIUM Fluid Concepts and Creative Analogies: A Computer Model Douglas Hofstadter Center for Research on Concepts and Cognition Indiana University - Bloomington Thursday, 23 May, 4:15 p.m. Cordura 100 The architecture of the Copycat Program is sketched in broad strokes with stress placed on its model of _concepts_ and on the essential role played by nondeterminism in the model. The domain along with several typical problems in it will be discussed, and statistical summaries of many runs of the program on each problem will be presented in the form of bargraphs, showing how often each answer is produced. The "popularity" of each answer is contrasted with another measure of its quality, demonstrating that the program's most "natural" roots do not necessarily lead it to the most insightful viewpoints in all cases, but that insight is recognized when the program stumbles across it. The gradual emergence of concepts relevant to the situation at hand from their default status of dormancy is a key feature of the architecture, and mechanisms allowing this to happen will be described. ------------------------------ To: nl-kr@cs.rpi.edu >From: Marie Meteer Subject: AI Seminar: John Nerbonne, May 27 Date: Sun, 19 May 91 13:43:57 EDT Mail-System-Version: BBN Science Development Program AI Seminar Series Lecture Nominal Comparatives and Generalized Quantifier John Nerbonne Deutsches Forschungszentrum fur kunstliche Intelligenz Saarbrucken, Germany nerbonne@dfki.uni-sb.de BBN, 2nd floor large conference room 10 Moulton St, Cambridge MA, 02138 Tuesday, May 28th, 1991, 10:30 AM This work adopts the perspective of Generalized Quantifier Theory in order to focus on the microstructure of comparative determiners. Since nominal comparatives involve plural and mass reference, we begin with a domain of discourse upon which a lattice structure (Link's) is imposed, and which maps, first to a domain of abstract dimensions (e.g. cardinalities, volumes), and then to concrete measures (in N,R+). The mapping must be Archimedean. Comparisons begin as simple predicates on dimensions or measures; from these we derive classes of predicates on the domain, i.e. generalized determiners (quantifiers), and show e.g. how monotonicity properties follow in the derivation. This results in a proposal for a logical language which includes derived determiners, and which is an attractive target for semantic interpretation; it also turns out that some interesting comparative determiners are first order, at least when restricted to nonparametric and noncollective predications. Although there's an extensive literature on the semantics of adjectival comparison, there's much less on nominal comparatives. Keenan and Moss (Keenan 1984) investigate these fairly abstractly, also from a generalized quantifier perspective, demonstrating e.g. conservativity (and adducing an interesting class of ternary determiners). But their approach is broad and systematic; comparative determiners are syncategorematic. The treatment below is more detailed. This also seems to be the first study to proceed from a plural (or mass-term) logic to a treatment of nominal comparatives. But this perspective seems not only descriptively essential (since virtually all nominal comparatives involve plural or mass reference), it also leads to an interesting generalization about the possible comparative determiners: the only ones possible depend on measure functions which are homomorphic to the plural (or mass) domain. ******************************************************* Suggestions for AI Seminar speakers are always welcome. Please e-mail suggestions to Marie Meteer (mmeteer@bbn.com) or Dan Cerys (cerys@bbn.com). ******************************************************* ------------------------------ End of NL-KR Digest *******************