First Announcement and Call For Papers ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ESSLLI-99 workshop on The Generation of Nominal Expressions University of Utrecht, The Netherlands 9-13 August 1999 Context: The workshop will take place in association with the 11th European Summer School "Logic Linguistics and Information" (ESSLLI), to be held in Utrecht, The Netherlands, from 9-20 August 1999. The format of the workshop is 5 x 90 minutes on the 5 consecutive days of 9 to 13 August 1999. The ESSLLI Summer School is organized under the auspices of the European Association for Logic, Language and Information (FoLLI). Previous ESSLLI Summer Schools have been highly successful, attracting around 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. For more information see . Workshop Description: If someone attempted to assess the `state of the art' of linguistic research on nominal expressions by looking at how present-day programs generate nominals, he or she would no doubt underestimate gravely the level of sophistication of theoretical work on nominals. It can be argued that this is because existing work on the computational generation of nominals has limited itself to relatively simple nominals, often focussing on simple (singular) definite descriptions and pronouns. Alternatively, it might be contended that much of the theoretical work in this area is not mature enough to be appicable in generation. Be this as it may, work on the generation of nominals has not profited much from theoretical research in formal semantics and psycholinguistics on the meaning, interpretation and production of nominal expressions. This workshop will try to bridge the gap between theory and practice in this area by focusing on the generation of nominal expressions of different linguistic types including, for example, indefinite and quantificational NPs (of different monotonicity types). The theme of the workshop is closely related to that of a number of ongoing research projects, including the GNOME (`Generation of NOMinal Expressions') project, in which the ITRI (Brighton) and HCRC (Edinburgh/Durham) collaborate, and which is funded by the EPSRC in the United Kingdom. Topics for which submissions are invited include: (1) The influence of discourse context on the appropriateness and interpretation of a nominal expression (2) Descriptive issues concerning the treatment of plurality, bridging, aggregation, eventualities, reference to text, cross-modal reference, etc. (3) Representational issues (i.e., what kind of meaning representations should form the input to the generation algorithm?) (4) Reversibility of grammars (5) Differences in textual style or `genre' (6) Psycholinguistic research relevant to computational Natural Language Generation (NLG) (7) Corpus-based work leading to insights relevant for computational NLG (8) Issues of system/algorithm evaluation. Practical issues: We welcome short (i.e., roughly 1000-1500 words) electronic submissions (send email to Rodger.Kibble@itri.brighton.ac.uk) on the theme of the workshop. Submissions should be in Postscript or plain ascii. Please include "ESSLLI99" in the Subject line of your message to make things easy for us. In accordance with the description of the Workshop Description, we encourage submissions about theoretical (e.g., formal semantic or psycholinguistic), applied, or corpus-based work, as long as the work is clearly relevant for NLG programs. No matter what they consider the main focus of their work, we ask authors to *stress relevance for NLG* in their submission (and, later, in their presentation). This will ensure that all contributions will contain a common `core', notwithstanding their differences in perspective. It is ESSLLI's practice to make sure that workshops go ahead only if there turns out to be a sufficient level of interest, based on quantity and quality of submissions. Workshop speakers are required to register for the Summer School; however, workshop speakers will be able to register at a reduced rate to be determined by the Organizing Committee. Limited funds are available to contribute to speakers' expenses in exceptional circumstances. Important dates: - First call for papers: 22 October 1998 - Deadline for submissions of abstracts: 1 March 1999 - Notification of acceptance: 1 May 1999 - Workshop to be held: August 9-13 For any questions, please contact the organizers or consult our web page at which will shortly be available. Rodger Kibble & Kees van Deemter Information Technology Research Institute (ITRI) University of Brighton Lewes Road, Watts Building Brighton BN2 4GJ United Kingdom Email: Rodger.Kibble@itri.brighton.ac.uk Kees.van.Deemter@itri.brighton.ac.uk Fax: +44 1273 642908