Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 14, No. 580.
Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London
<http://www.princeton.edu/~mccarty/humanist/>
<http://www.kcl.ac.uk/humanities/cch/humanist/>
[1] From: lachance@chass.utoronto.ca (Francois Lachance) (31)
Subject: TCC 2001 ONLINE CONFERENCE: Final Call For Proposals &
Registration (fwd)
[2] From: "David L. Gants" <dgants@english.uga.edu> (34)
Subject: XSLT conference, UK, April 2001
[3] From: "David L. Gants" <dgants@english.uga.edu> (31)
Subject: FG/MOL First Call For Papers
[4] From: "David L. Gants" <dgants@english.uga.edu> (22)
Subject: ichim2001: Submission Deadline
[5] From: "David L. Gants" <dgants@english.uga.edu> (25)
Subject: Text Summarization/Document Understanding Conference
[6] From: "David L. Gants" <dgants@english.uga.edu> (59)
Subject: 2nd CfP: Workshop on "Coordination & Action" at ESSLLI
2001
[7] From: NINCH-ANNOUNCE <david@ninch.org> (49)
Subject: NFAIS seminar on Fair Use: Jan. 25, 2001, Washington,
DC
[8] From: NINCH-ANNOUNCE <david@ninch.org> (78)
Subject: Computer-related sessions at the College Art
Association in Chicago
--[1]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Tue, 09 Jan 2001 11:16:48 +0000
From: lachance@chass.utoronto.ca (Francois Lachance)
Subject: TCC 2001 ONLINE CONFERENCE: Final Call For Proposals &
Registration (fwd)
> [Hauoli Makahiki Hou! (Happy New Year)
> Apologies to those receiving multiple copies of this message. -bk]
>
> TCC 2001 FINAL CALL FOR PROPOSALS
>
> THE INTERNET & LEARNING
> What Have We Discovered and Where Are We Headed?
> Sixth Annual Teaching in the Community Colleges Online Conference
> April 17-19, 2001
>
> Web site: <http://leahi.kcc.hawaii.edu/org/tcon2001>
> EXTENDED Proposal Deadline: January 12, 2001
>
> The deadline for proposals for the Sixth Annual TCC Online Conference on
> Teaching and Learning has been extended to January 12, 2001. The
> conference theme is "The Internet & Learning: What Have We Discovered and
> Where Are We Headed?" We encourage college faculty, staff and
> administrators to submit proposals that relate to using the Internet to
> deliver, manage, or support instruction in an online or traditional
> classroom.
>
> TRACKS
> * Online & Traditional Course Preparation and Delivery
> * Classroom Communications
> * Online Student Services
> * Academic Support Services
> * Online Degrees, Programs & Virtual Colleges
> * Courseware and Communication Technologies
> * Social Issues & Online Behavior
>
[material deleted]
--[2]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Tue, 09 Jan 2001 11:22:55 +0000
From: "David L. Gants" <dgants@english.uga.edu>
Subject: XSLT conference, UK, April 2001
>> From: "Sebastian Rahtz,,,"
>> <sebastian.rahtz@computing-services.oxford.ac.uk>
XSLT-UK. The first XSLT conference.
-----------------------------------
The first XSLT-UK conference will take place in the UK, Sunday and
Monday, 8-9 April 2001 in Keble College, Oxford, England. We now have
our speakers lined up, the venue is booked, and it is looking good for
an interesting two days.
The announce is at http://www.dpawson.co.uk/xsltuk/, and
registration is open, at http://users.ox.ac.uk/~rahtz/regform.html
The conference is priced reasonably, and if you are really new to XSLT,
then Ken Holman's two day course is set to run on Friday and Saturday,
6th and 7th April 2001. This provides an ideal introduction to XSLT.
SPEAKERS:
* Jeni Tennison (Jeni Tennison Consulting Ltd): XSLT Design Patterns
* Michael Kay (ICL): XSLT performance
* Jacek Ambroziak (CrossGain Corporation, formerly Sun Microsystems):
The XSLT Compiler for the JVM
* Norm Walsh (Sun): Building and maintaining the Docbook XSL family
* Steve Muench (Oracle Corporation): XSLT and Databases: A Compelling
Combination for Web Apps
* Tom Kaiser (Ginger Alliance, Prague, Czech Republic): Charlie - an
XML application framework
* Wolfgang Emmerich (Dept. of Computer Science, University College
London): Markup Meets Middleware
* Leigh Dodds (xmlhack.com, ingenta ltd): Schematron: validating XML
using XSLT
* Mario Jeckle (DaimlerChrysler Research and Technology): Using XSLT
to derive schemata from UML
* Ben Robb (cScape Strategic Internet Services Ltd): Creating a diary
application using XSLT
* Evan Lenz (XYZFind Corp.): XSLT as a Query Language
* Arved Sandstrom (e-plicity): Implementing XSL formatting objects
* G. Ken Holman (Crane Softwrights Ltd.): Experiments Using XSLT With
Topic Maps
--[3]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Tue, 09 Jan 2001 11:23:45 +0000
From: "David L. Gants" <dgants@english.uga.edu>
Subject: FG/MOL First Call For Papers
>> From: larry moss <lsm@cs.indiana.edu>
FGMOL'01 FGMOL'01 FGMOL'01 FGMOL'01 FGMOL'01 FGMOL'01 FGMOL'01 FGMOL'01
FORMAL GRAMMAR/MATHEMATICS OF LANGUAGE CONFERENCE
August 10--12, 2001
Helsinki, Finland
FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS
We are pleased to announce the joint meeting of two conferences:
the sixth conferene on Formal Grammar and the seventh on the
Mathematics of Language. The joint meeting will be held just prior
to the European Summer School in Logic, Language, and Information.
AIMS and SCOPE
FGMOL'01 provides a forum for the presentation of new and original
research on formal grammar and mathematical aspects of language,
especially with regard to the application of formal methods to natural
language analysis.
Themes of interest include, but are not limited to,
* formal and computational syntax, semantics, pragmatics, and phonology;
* model-theoretic and proof-theoretic methods in linguistics;
* constraint-based and resource-sensitive approaches to grammar;
* foundational, methodological and architectural issues in grammar.
* mathematical properties of linguistic frameworks
* theories and models of natural language processing and generation
* parsing theory
* statistical and quantitative models of language
[material deleted]
FURTHER INFORMATION
Web site for ESSLLI XI: http://www.helsinki.fi/esslli/
Web site for FGMOL'01 :http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~ircs/mol/mol7.html
The organizers:
Geert-Jan Kruijff gj@cogsci.ed.ac.uk
Larry Moss lsm@cs.indiana.edu
Dick Oehrle oehrle@linc.cis.upenn.edu
--[4]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Tue, 09 Jan 2001 11:24:28 +0000
From: "David L. Gants" <dgants@english.uga.edu>
Subject: ichim2001: Submission Deadline
>> From: "J. Trant" <jtrant@amico.org>
CALL FOR PAPERS and TUTORIALS: ichim2001
International Cultural Heritage Informatics Meeting
Cultural Heritage and Technologies in the Third Millennium
Politecnico di Milano, Milan Italy
3-7 September, 2001
http://www.ichim01.polimi.it (Italy)
or
http://www.archimuse.com/ichim2001/ (US)
SUBMISSION DEADLINE: FEBRUARY 2, 2001
About ichim2001
---------------
Since 1991 International Cultural Heritage Informatics Meeting
(ICHIM) has provided an international forum in which to explore the
relationships between Technology and Cultural Heritage. Under the
theme "Cultural Heritage and Technologies in the Third Millennium",
ichim2001 will explore the interplay between innovative technologies
and their applications in the cultural sphere. Specific attention
will be paid to the evolution of Cultural Heritage Institutions,
whose new forms are being determined by the combined impact of
innovative technologies and changing social expectations of their
role.
[material deleted]
--[5]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Tue, 09 Jan 2001 11:24:51 +0000
From: "David L. Gants" <dgants@english.uga.edu>
Subject: Text Summarization/Document Understanding Conference
>> From: Priscilla Rasmussen <rasmusse@cs.rutgers.edu>
Preliminary Call for Participation
Text Summarization and Document Understanding Conference
Over the last five years, we have witnessed a tremendous increase in
interest in summarization research from both the academia and the
industry. In spite of this, we do not know yet what summarization
techniques are most adequate, what systems perform the best, and what
evaluation techniques are most appropriate for assessing the quality
of a summary. To further progress in the field and enable researchers
participate in large-scale experiments, the National Institute of
Standards and Technology is beginning a new evaluation series in the
area of text summarization, tentatively called the Document
Understanding Conference (DUC). The basic design for the evaluation
follows ideas in a recent summarization road map that was created by a
committee of researchers in summarization, headed by Daniel Marcu.
Plans call for the creation of reference data (documents and
summaries) for training and testing. The training data will be
distributed in March of 2001, test data distributed in June, and
results due for evaluation the first of August 2001. A workshop will
be held in September to discuss these results and to make further
plans.
For further details on the evaluation or on the road map, see
http://www-nlpir.nist.gov/projects/duc/.
To be added to a mailing list for further announcements, please
contact donna.harman@nist.gov. To contribute to the summarization
roadmap, please contact marcu@isi.edu.
--[6]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Tue, 09 Jan 2001 11:25:49 +0000
From: "David L. Gants" <dgants@english.uga.edu>
Subject: 2nd CfP: Workshop on "Coordination & Action" at ESSLLI 2001
>> From: <pkuehnle@lili59.lili.uni-bielefeld.de>
Peter Kuehnlein (Bielefeld Univ., Germany), Alison Newlands (Univ. of
Strathclyde, UK) and Hannes Rieser (Bielefeld Univ., Germany)
Coordination and Action
=======================
Workshop at ESSLLI XIII (Helsinki) August 20th - 24th, 2001
(http://www.lili.uni-bielefeld.de/~pkuehnle/HELSINKI)
Background & Scope:
===================
Coordination is at present one of the most powerful explanatory
devices used in various cognitive sciences (philosophy, psychology,
linguistics, logics, AI). The original impetus came from philosophy,
especially from D. Lewis' work on coordination and convention (Lewis,
1969). Later on the concept gained considerable acceptance due to the
work of the psychologist H. Clark and his collaborators (Clark (ed.),
1992; Clark, 1996) who investigated various problems of language use,
such as reference and agents' information states.
They showed that multi-agent dialogue is based on coordination and
joint action, grounding and mutual belief. These concepts rapidly
found their way into dialogue theories based on discourse analysis or
speech act theory. A slightly different perspective on coordination
can be found in theories using the notion of dialogue game (Levin and
Moore, 1978; Mann, 1988; Carletta et al., 1997; Ginzburg, 1997; Power,
1979).
Dialogue games are applied in a variety of research contexts, inter
alia in the research initiatives VERBMOBIL (Germany) and TRINDI (UK,
Germany, Sweden). The concept of dialogue games also stimulated
reconstructions in more formal theories such as DRT (Lascarides &
Asher, 1999; Poesio, 1998) or various forms of update semantics
(Hulstijn, 2000). The notion of joint action received support from
philosophy (e.g. Bratman (1992) on cooperativity, Searle (1990) on
collective intention) and especially from the AI community working on
shared plans in interaction (Grosz and collaborators, 1996). It was
repeatedly taken up by logicians, especially those working on
information states, mutuality or BDI-architectures (Fagin et al.,
1995; Herzig and collaborators, 1999; Sadek, 1992). Research topics
coming to the fore at present are coordination of information between
different hierarchical levels of language and speech, a topic already
discussed in H. Clark's work, and coordination of information coming
from different channels (such as visual-gestural and verbal-auditory).
Especially research with a multi-media objective contributed by
linguistics, psychology and AI is of relevance in this context. The
intention-based concept of coordination is also used in robotics and
simulation work for agent-architectures combining high-level
deliberative patterns with low-level reactive devices for which the
well-known RoboCup setting provides a good example.
[material deleted]
Further information:
====================
For local arrangements, please contact the ESSLLI organizers, and see
http://www.helsinki.fi/esslli
For further information on the workshop, please contact
pkuehnle@lili.uni-bielefeld.de and see
http://www.uni-bielefeld.de/~pkuehnle/HELSINKI
--
Collaborative Research Center SFB 360
Univ. Bielefeld phone: ++49-521-106 3503
Universitdtsstrasse 25 e-mail: pkuehnle@lili.uni-bielefeld.de
D-33611 Bielefeld URL: http://www.lili.uni-bielefeld.de/~pkuehnle
_______________________________________________________________________________
--[7]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Tue, 09 Jan 2001 11:27:09 +0000
From: NINCH-ANNOUNCE <david@ninch.org>
Subject: NFAIS seminar on Fair Use: Jan. 25, 2001, Washington, DC
NINCH ANNOUNCEMENT
News on Networking Cultural Heritage Resources
from across the Community
January 3, 2001
National Federation of Abstracting and Information Services
Fair Use and The Internet: Current Status and Emerging Trends
A One-Day Seminar
Washington, DC: Thursday, January 25, 2001
$250 ($199 librarians; $99 NFAIS members)
<http://www.pa.utulsa.edu/nfais.html>http://www.pa.utulsa.edu/nfais.html
>Date: Tue, 2 Jan 2001 21:30:39 -0500 (EST)
>From: Ann Okerson <ann.okerson@yale.edu>
>To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
>>Reply-To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
This announcement has been cross-posted to a variety of listservs. We
apologize for duplicative announcements that you may receive.
Fair Use and The Internet: Current Status and Emerging Trends
Thursday, January 25, 2001
A Valuable One-Day Seminar
Sponsored by National Federation of Abstracting and Information Services
The NFAIS Symposium on Fair Use and the Internet: Current Status and Emerging
Trends will provide an opportunity for digital information providers and users
to obtain information on:
- where the law stands today - both domestically and internationally;
- how and when changes in the law may occur as courts interpret legal
standards in the reality of the e-commerce marketplace;
- new standards for licensing practices;
- the ability of new technologies to provide security to information
producers and to enable users to gain maximum benefit from accessing
and using digital informational products and services.
Confirmed Speakers include
Mary Beth Peters, Register, U.S. Copyright Office
Justin Hughes, Attorney Advisor, Office of Legislative and International
Affairs, U.S. Patent & Trademark Office
Vince Garlock, Counsel, House Subcommittee on Courts and Intellectual
Property
Carlyle C. Ring, Jr. Attorney at Law, Ober Kaler, NCCUSL Commissioner,
Virginia
Keith Kupferschmid, Intellectual Property Counsel, Software & Information
Industry Association
Allan Adler, Vice President, Legal and Governmental Affairs, Association
of American Publishers
Sally Wiandt, Director, Law Library and Professor of Law at Washington &
Lee University.
Adrian Alexander, Executive Director, Big12Plus Libraries Consortium
To see the complete program and listing of speakers and to print out a
registration form, go to the NFAIS web site
(<http://www.nfais.org>http://www.nfais.org) and
click on the Fair Use and the Internet link on the home page.
[material deleted]
--[8]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Tue, 09 Jan 2001 11:28:06 +0000
From: NINCH-ANNOUNCE <david@ninch.org>
Subject: Computer-related sessions at the College Art Association
in Chicago
NINCH ANNOUNCEMENT
News on Networking Cultural Heritage Resources
from across the Community
January 3, 2001
DIGITAL SESSIONS AT COLLEGE ART ASSOCIATION 2000
February 28 - March 3, 2001: Chicago
<http://www.collegeart.org/caa/program2001/>http://www.collegeart.org/caa/program2001/
Following our announcement of digital sessions at the American Historical
Association's meeting (Boston, Jan.4-7
<<http://www.h-net.msu.edu/aha>http://www.h-net.msu.edu/aha>) and at the
2000 MLA Convention (Washington DC, Dec 27-30
<<http://www.ach.org/mla00/guide.html>http://www.ach.org/mla00/guide.html>),
here is a companion announcement of computer-related sessions at the
upcoming annual meeting of the College Art Association in Chicago.
David Green
===========
>From: "Stephanie Davies" <sdavies@collegeart.org>
>To: <david@ninch.org>
>>Date: Wed, 3 Jan 2001 12:07:28 -0500
Below please find the titles and schedules for the "electronic" sessions at
the 2001 Chicago Conference.
Multiple Crossroads: Creativity and the Digit
Chairs: Lynne Allen, Mason Gross School of the Arts, Rutgers University;
David Kiehl, Whitney Museum of American Art
Thursday, 8:00-10:30p.m.
CAA Committee on Women in the Arts
We Do "Windows" (and Much More): Women, Multimedia Technology, and the Arts
Chairs: Karen Bearor, Florida State University; Muriel Magenta, Arizona
State University
Saturday, 9:30 a.m.-noon
The Internet: A Diplomatically Correct Site for Politically Incorrect Art?
Chair: Gary A. Keown, Southeastern Louisiana University
Friday, 2:00-4:30 p.m.
Pedagagoy 4.0 Is In Beta: Teaching in the New Media Studio
Chair: Brooke A. Knight, University of Maine
Thursday, 9:30 a.m.-noon
nets/screens/projections/dreams: film, video art, and digital movies
Chair: Mary Patten, The School of the Art Institute of Chicago
Friday, 9:00-11:30 a.m.
Coalition of Women's Art Organizations
The Impact of Digital Technologies on College Level Art Programs: Open Forum
Chair: Kyra Belan, Broward Community College
Thursday, 12:30-2:00 p.m.
Community College Professors of Art
Strategies for Distance Education in the Community College
Chair: Alan Petersen, Coconino Community College
Thursday, 12:30-2:00 p.m.
Association of Art Editors
Voices from the New Frontier: Editing for Online Publication
Chair: Susan Rossen, The Art Institute of Chicago
Friday, 12:00-1:30 p.m.
===========================================================================
Stephanie Davies
Conference Coordinator
College Art Association
275 Seventh Avenue
New York, NY 10001
212/691-1051, ext. 242
212/627-2381, fax
sdavies@collegeart.org
As the largest association for visual arts professionals, College Art
Association promotes the highest levels of creativity and scholarship in the
practice, teaching, and interpretation of the visual arts.
Join CAA in Chicago for the 89th Annual Conference, February 28 - March 3,
2001. For Conference details and membership information, see our website:
www.collegeart.org.
==============================================================
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