Copenhagen workshop

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Ivan A. Sag (sag@skol.stanford.edu)
Mon, 27 Jun 94 14:16:42 PDT


All, We have a preliminary schedule of events for the Copenhagen workshop, which we enclose. Comments welcome. Also, the ohio state server stands ready to make new papers available via anonymous ftp. Already, you can find there three papers -- Sag and Godard's NELS paper, Sag and Fodor's WCCFL paper, and Xue, Pollard and Sag's WCCFL paper -- as postscript files. Please feel free to contribute relevant papers to this directory in preparation for the workshop (see attached directions from John). Hope to see lots of you in Copenhagen. Best, Ivan and John ------------------------------------------------------------------------ HPSG Workshop Coordinators: John Nerbonne and Ivan A. Sag ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Monday 8 August: UDCs and empty categories (Robert Levine and Ivan Sag) Issues: 1. Cross-linguistic motivation for feature-based encoding of UDCs 2. The evidence for/against empty categories 3. Parasitic gaps: licensing; the Cinque/Postal antipronominalization effect. New papers: Hukari, Thomas and Robert D. Levine. in preparation. expanded version of WCCFL paper? Sag, Ivan A. and Janet D. Fodor. Extraction Without Traces. in press. WCCFL 13. Stanford: CSLI Publications. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Tuesday 9 August: Linearization Theory (Andreas Kathol and Robert Levine) Issues: 1. Reape-style liberation vs. argument composition. 2. Germanic word order via domain extension. 3. Why ordering domains are necessary, even if Reape's particular proposal for German might not be compelling. 4. Linearization and coordination. New Papers: Pollard, Carl, Robert Kasper, Robert Levine. 1994. Toward a Theory of Linearization in HPSG. Ms. OSU. Gunji, Takao. 1994. On Lexical Treatment of Japanese Causatives. To appear in Levine and Green, eds. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Wednesday 10 August: Argument Composition (John Nerbonne, Tsuneko Nakazawa and Gertjan van Noord) Issues: 1. Germanic word order via argument composition. 2. Adverb Scope, verb clusters, and Scrambling. 3. Comparison with domain extension analyses. 4. The syntax-lexicon interface. New papers: Iida, Masayo, Christopher Manning, Patrick Oneill, and Ivan A. Sag. 1994. The Lexical Integrity of Japanese Causatives. To appear in Levine and Green, eds. Hinrichs, Erhard and Tsuneko Nakazawa. 1994. Lexical and syntactic properties of control constructions in German. Unpublished ms., Tuebingen and Tokyo. van Noord, Gertjan and Gosse Bouma. 1994. Adjuncts and the Processing of Lexical Rules. Proceedings of COLING 1994, Kyoto. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Thursday 11 August: Romance Syntax (Daniele Godard and Paola Monachesi) Issues: 1. Lexical Integrity and the lexical analysis of clitics 2. Clitic climbing and the structure of the verb phrase. 3. Extraction from NP; cliticization, extraction and Pied Piping. 4. Reflexive clitics. New papers: Monachesi, Paola. 1994. Towards a Typology of Italian Clitics. CLS 30. Sag, Ivan A., and Daniele Godard. Extraction of de Phrases from the French NP. 1994. NELS 24. UMass: GLSA Publications. Abeille, Anne, and Daniele Godard. 1994. The Complementation of French Auxiliaries. WCCFL 13. Stanford: CSLI Publications. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Friday 12 August: The Lexicon (Ann Copestake, Anthony Davis, Jongbok Kim, Rob Malouf, Susanne Riehemann) Issues: 1. Lexical rules: are there any? 2. Morphological regularities: the grey area between rules and exceptions? 3. Linking theory. New Papers: Davis, Anthony. 1994. Excerpt from Linking and the Hierarchical Lexicon. Doctoral dissertation, Stanford University. Malouf, Robert. 1994. Noun Incorporation and the Mohawk Lexicon. Manuscript, Stanford University. Riehemann, Susanne. 1994. Morphology and the Hierarchical Lexicon. Manuscript, Stanford University. -------------------------------------------------------------------- To place a file on the OSU ftp server, do the following (what you type is underlined by carats: like this, the machine prompt ^^^^^^^^^ is marked by `>'. It's might also be `ftp>' ). First, go to the local directory your paper <my-paper.xxx> is in. (This makes the ftp put command simpler.) > ftp ling.ohio-state.edu ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ > login: anonymous ^^^^^^^^^ > password: nerbonne@let.rug.nl % substitute your own email ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ % address here > cd pub/HPSG/Workshop.LLI.94 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ > binary % only important if you're ^^^^^^ % transfering .dvi files > put <my-paper.xxx> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ > % see below > quit If you want to pick up papers, then at the point marked "%see below" just do the following: > ls % see what's there ^^ > get pollard-sag-99.dvi % transfer file to you ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ If you have trouble using ftp, you might want to ask locally for help (it's a useful tool), but as a last resort, you can email papers to me--either in .dvi (uuencoded) or postscript (.ps), and I'll put them there. --John Nerbonne nerbonne@let.rug.nl


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