Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 15, No. 369.
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: "Bobley, Brett" <BBobley@neh.gov> (39)
Subject: Announcing: NEH eHumanities Lecture Series
[2] From: "David L. Gants" <dgants@parallel.park.uga.edu> (27)
Subject: CFP: COLING-2002
[3] From: "David L. Gants" <dgants@parallel.park.uga.edu> (37)
Subject: CFP: ACL-02
--[1]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Fri, 16 Nov 2001 09:16:05 +0000
From: "Bobley, Brett" <BBobley@neh.gov>
Subject: Announcing: NEH eHumanities Lecture Series
*****************************************
The National Endowment for the Humanities
Presents
eHumanities Lecture Series
*****************************************
The NEH invites you to attend the next three installments of the eHumanities
Lecture Series. The goal of this series is to bring leading scholars to
Washington to discuss the relationship of digital technology and the
humanities. Last year, we had a terrific turnout for our free lecture series
held here at the Old Post Office in Washington, DC.
See our web page for detailed information and to register:
http://www.neh.gov/news/ehumanities.html
Please feel free to pass this to colleagues.
LECTURES IN BRIEF:
December 11
Noon
"Farewell to the Information Age"
GEOFFREY NUNBERG
Principal Scientist, Xerox Palo Alto Research Center
Professor of Linguistics, Stanford University
February 13
Noon
"After the Internet"
JAMES O'DONNELL
Professor of Classical Studies
Vice Provost for Information Systems and Computing
University of Pennsylvania
February 27
Noon
"The Next Generation of Digital Scholarship: An Experiment in Form"
WILL THOMAS
Director of the Virginia Center for Digital History and Research
Assistant Professor of History
University of Virginia
ED AYERS
Hugh P. Kelly Professor of History
University of Virginia
**Note: If you wish to be removed from this mailing list, please reply and
let me know.
--[2]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Fri, 16 Nov 2001 09:17:50 +0000
From: "David L. Gants" <dgants@parallel.park.uga.edu>
Subject: CFP: COLING-2002
>> From: JS <shin@lang-tech.csie.ncnu.edu.tw>
COLING-2002: Call for Papers [2001/11/14]
================================================================
19th International Conference on Computational Linguistics
August, 24 - September, 1, 2002
Howard International House, Taipei, Taiwan
================================================================
Organized by:
Academia Sinica, ACLCLP and Tsing Hua University
Under the Auspices of:
The International Committee on Computational Linguistics
URL: http://www.coling2002.sinica.edu.tw/
================================================================
COLING is the most prominent conference in the field of
Computational Linguistics. In its 40 plus years of existence,
the biennial COLING has been a productive forum for scholars
all over the world to exchange original research papers on
a broad range of topics in computational linguistics. COLING
is an international forum for discussion and presentation
representing the current state of the art and determining
standards of computational linguistics research.
In 2002, Taiwan will host the 19th COLING conference. This
will be the first time that COLING is held outside Europe,
North America, or Japan. It will be a chance for participants
to experience the energy behind Taiwan's vibrant growth in
knowledge technology, as well as the natural beauty of Formosa
and its rich cultural heritage.
[material deleted]
--[3]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Fri, 16 Nov 2001 09:18:24 +0000
From: "David L. Gants" <dgants@parallel.park.uga.edu>
Subject: CFP: ACL-02
>> From: Priscilla Rasmussen <rasmusse@cs.rutgers.edu>
ACL-02 Call For Papers
40th Anniversary Meeting of the Association for
Computational Linguistics
7 - 12 July, 2002
Philadelphia, PA, USA
General Conference Chair: Pierre Isabelle (XRCE Grenoble, France)
Program Co-Chairs: Eugene Charniak (Brown University, USA)
Dekang Lin (University of Alberta, Canada)
Local Organization Chair: Martha Palmer (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
Area Chairs:
Discourse and Dialogue: Daniel Marcu, Information Sciences Institute, USC
Generation and Multi-Modality: Stephan Busemann, German Research Center for AI
Machine Translation and Multilinguality: Keh-Yih Su, Behavior Design Corp.
Lexicon and Semantics: Bonnie Dorr, University of Maryland
Speech, Language Modeling and Statistical Methods: Steve Abney, AT&T Research
Word Segmentation, Shallow Parsing, Chunking and Tagging: Jan Hajic,
Charles University (Prague)
Syntax, Grammars, Morphology and Phonology: Mark Steedman, Univ. of Edinburgh
Parsing: John Carroll, University of Sussex
NLP Applications: Ellen Riloff, University of Utah
The Association for Computational Linguistics invites the submission
of papers for its 40th Annual Meeting hosted jointly with the North
American Chapter of the ACL. 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;
language-oriented information retrieval, question answering,
summarization and information extraction; language-oriented machine
learning; corpus-based language modeling; multi-lingual processing,
machine translation and translation aids; natural language interfaces
and dialogue systems; approaches to coordinating the linguistic with
other modalities in multi-media systems; message and narrative
understanding systems; tools and resources; and evaluation of systems.
[material deleted]
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