It is a linguistic commonplace to say that the meaning of text is more than the conjunction of the meaning of its sentences. But what exactly are the rules that govern its interpretation, and what are the constraints that define well-formed discourse? For a long time, the development of precise frameworks of discourse interpretation has been hampered by the lack of a deeper understanding of the dependencies between different discourse units. Recent years have seen a considerable advance in this field. A number of strong constraints have been proposed that restrict the sequencing and attaching of segments at various descriptive levels, as well as the interpretation of their interrelations. The availability of annotated corpora has also helped to confront key hypotheses with observable phenomena.
The goal of this workshop is to provide a forum for presenting recent research on constraints in discourse. The target areas include the recognition of discourse structure as well as the interpretation and generation of discourse in a broad variety of domains. The workshop offers a forum for researchers from diverse formal approaches, including but not limited to:
- - Rhetorical Structure Theory (RST)
- - Segmented Discourse Representation Theory (SDRT)
- - Discourse Tree Adjoining Grammars
- - Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar (HPSG)
- - The QUD Modell
- - Plan Based Reasoning
- - Abductive Reasoning
- - Gricean Pragmatics
- - Speech Act Theory
The conference invite talks that further our theoretical understanding of the role of constraints in discourse, as well as empirical studies that shed light on theoretical issues about discourse structure or interpretation.. The conference is explicitly intended for discussion and comparison of theoretical accounts that lay the ground for applications. It is not intended as a platform for system demonstrations. Specific topics might relate to
- - Anaphora Resolution
- - Co-reference
- - Dialogical vs. Monological Discourse
- - Questions and Answers
- - Lexicon and Discourse Relations
- - Cognitive Modeling
- - Underspecification and Nonmonotonic Inferences
INVITED SPEAKERS
- Barabara di Eugenio (University of Illinois at Chicago, USA)
- Jonathan Ginzburg (Université Paris Diderot, France)
- Andrew Kehler ( UC San Diego, USA)
SUBMISSIONS
Articles should be anonymous and should not exceed 4 pages (including figures, bibliography, possible apendices). It is expected that each accepted paper be presented at the meeting by one of its authors.
Papers must be submitted electronically in PDF format at http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=cid2011
IMPORTANT DATES
- Paper submission deadline: April 15th 2011
- Notification of acceptance: June 1st 2011
- Camera-ready papers due: July 15th 2011
- CID conference: September 14-16th 2011
PROGRAM COMITTEE
- Nicholas Asher (IRIT, FR) chair
- Myriam Bras (Université de Toulouse, FR)
- Anton Benz (Center for Genral Linguistics, Berlin, Allemagne)
- Laurence Danlos (Alpage, Université Paris 7, FR) chair
- Pascal Denis (Alpage, INRIA, FR)
- Marcus Egg (Centre for Language and Cognition, Groningen, NL)
- Barbara di Eugenio ( University of Illinois at Chicago, USA)
- Julia Hirschberg (Colombia University, USA)
- Alex Lascarides (University of Edinburgh, UK)
- Philippe Muller (Université de Toulouse, FR)
- Sylvain Pogodalla (Calligramme, INRIA, FR)
- Owen Rambow (Colombia University, USA)
- Manfred Stede (Universität Potsdam, D)
- Maité Taboada ( Simon Fraser University, CA)
- Laure Vieu (IRIT, FR)
- Henk Zeevat (ILLC, University of of Amsterdam, NL)