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DiderotSchedule

FrancisBond edited this page Jun 20, 2018 · 74 revisions

Monday to Wednesday: Plenary

Schedule for the 2018 DELPH-IN Summit at the University of Chicago Center in Paris (6 rue Thomas Mann). Welcome coffee on arrival from 9:00 onwards.

Monday, 18 June
9:30-11:00 Plenary Session 1 -- Chair: Sanghoun
9:30-9:50 Introductions
9:50-10:40 Site Updates (8 minutes each)
Cambridge (Guy Emerson)
Paris (Berthold Crysmann)
Singapore (Francis Bond)
Stanford / Trondheim (Dan Flickinger)
Sussex (John Carroll)
Washington (Emily Bender)
10:40-11:00 Information extraction in the oil & gas domain using the IBM English Slot Grammar (Alexandre Rademaker: 10+10)
11:00-11:30 Coffee Break
11:30-13:00 Plenary Session 2 -- Chair: Dan
11:30 Nominalized clauses in the Grammar Matrix (Kristen Howell, Olga Zamaraeva & Emily Bender: 5 Blitz)
Clausal modifiers in the LinGO Grammar Matrix (Kristen Howell & Olga Zamaraeva: 5 Blitz)
Clausal complements in the Grammar Matrix (Olga Zamaraeva, Kristen Howell & Emily Bender: 20+10)
Improved type hierarchy processing and display (John Carroll: 20+10)
13:00-14:30 Lunch
14:30-16:00 Plenary Session 3 -- Chair: TBA
14:30-16:00 Discussion: Applications of MRS to downstream NLP tasks, in particular for language generation (Jan Buys) Notes
16:00-16:30 Coffee Break
16:30-18:00 Plenary Session 4 -- Chair: Francis
16:30 Indra update (David Moeljadi: 5+5)
Recent partnership for the development of !BrGram (Alexandre Rademaker: 10+10)
Error analysis of a neural MRS parser (Jan Buys & Emily Bender: 20+10)
Towards a new release of the ERG (Dan Flickinger: 20+10)
Tuesday, 19 June
9:30-11:00 Plenary Session 5 -- Chair: Emily
9:30 Discussion: WH-questions in the Grammar Matrix: A start (Olga Zamaraeva) notes
11:00-11:30 Coffee Break
11:30-13:00 Plenary Session 6 -- Chair: Guy
11:30 DMRS to text generation with neural networks (Jan Buys: 20+10)
Dialogue management framework for virtual agents (Bernd Kiefer: 20+10)
Neural networks for transducing between DMRS graphs in English and Japanese (Jan Buys: 10+10)
13:00-14:30 Lunch
14:30-16:00 Plenary Session 7 -- Chair: Berthold
14:30 Linguistic type database update (Francis Bond: 5 Blitz)
Integrated semantic framework (Francis Bond: 5+5)
A parsing model and a generation model for graph-structured syntacto-semantic representations (Weiwei Sun: 10+10)
Scope of temporal modifiers: Or how I learned to stop worrying and love the MRS scoping machinery (Guy Emerson: 20+10)
16:00-16:30 Coffee Break
16:30-18:00 Plenary Session 8 -- Chair: Bernd
16:30-16:50 Raising/control safari: How the ERG's inventory compares to what's studied in the theoretical literature (Emily Bender & Dan Flickinger: 10+10)
16:50-18:00 Discussion: ERG Semantic Documentation (ESD) focus group (Dan Flickinger, Stephan Oepen & Emily Bender)
Wednesday, 20 June
9:30-11:00 Plenary Session 9 -- Chair: Jan
9:30 Helping engineering students writing better English (Luis Morgado da Costa: 5+5)
Using the DELPH-IN resources for second language acquisition studies (Sanghoun Song: 10+10)
Feature resolution via lists (Gabriel Aguila-Multner & Berthold Crysmann: 20+10)
Business Meeting (All: 30)
11:00-11:30 Coffee Break
11:30-13:00 Plenary Session 10 -- Chair: John
11:30-12:30 Discussion: How could the HPSG and Universal Dependencies communities benefit each other for some integration? (Alexandre Rademaker)
12:30-13:00 Planning Special Interest Groups (All: 30) Spreadsheet --- max=8 --- 0.5, 1 to show interest
13:00-14:30 Lunch
14:30- Excursion (walk along the Seine towards île St Louis and île de la Cité), followed by Dinner

Thursday and Friday: Sub-Group Meetings

University of Paris Diderot, bâtiment Olympe de Gouges, rooms 126 & 127.

  • Tutorial request: The ERG - how to use it and how to contribute to improving results with technical/scientific texts [AlexandreRademaker]

  • Tutorial request: Introduction to HPSG grammar development starting from an existing grammar (e.g. LxGram) and/or from the Grammar Matrix [AlexandreRademaker]

  • Tutorial/SIG: Jacy Japanese grammar demo [DavidMoeljadi]

  • SIG: Unifying lexical resources (e.g. using WordNet or PARC's UL) [AlexandreRademaker]

  • SIG: Machine learning / neural network methods for deep linguistic representations [JanBuys]

  • SIG: Comparing and combining methods for mapping between strings and graphs [AlexanderKoller]

  • SIG: NL Generation from MRS-induced/deduced/reduced meaning representations [WeiweiSun]

  • SIG: How to teach grammar engineering [SanghounSong]

  • SIG: Teaching old-school semantics to new people who are trying to reinvent semantics [AlexanderKoller]

  • SIG: Noun incorporation [AngelinaMcMillanMajor]

  • SIG: Pragmatic reasoning in the Rational Speech Acts framework [GuyEmerson]

  • SIG: Constraining composition [AnnCopestake]

  • SIG: Use of DELPH-IN technology and resources for flexible dialogue systems [BerndKiefer]

  • SIG: Underspecification of PP attachment [EmilyBender,GuyEmerson]

  • SIG: Grammar engineering environment on top of LKB FOSS [Crysmann]

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