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Computational

Phonology

A Constraint-Based Approach

Steven Bird

"We... recommend this book to anyone

interested in computational phonology. "

--Computational Linguistics

Computational phonology is one of the

newest areas of computational linguistics,

and is experiencing rapid growth as its

practitioners apply the wealth of theories,

technologies and methodologies of

computational linguistics to phonology.

This book is the first to survey these

developments, and it does so in a way

that is accessible to computational

linguists, phonologists and computer

scientists alike.

Studies in Natural Language Processing

47496-5

Hardback $47.95

Linguistics and

Computation

Jennifer S. Cole, Georgia M. Green,

and Jerry L. Morgan, Editors

This volume consists of a collection

of papers that cover the diverse areas

of psycholinguistics, computational

linguistics, phonology, and syntax.

Contributors:

Steven Abney, Robert C. Berwick,

Sandiway Fong, Jennifer Cole, John Coleman,

Alan M. Frisch, Dale Gerdemann, Erhard

Hinrich, Julia Hirschberg, Richard Sproat,

David E. Johnson, Lawrence S. Moss, Tsuneko

Nakazawa, Annie Zaenan, RonaM M. Kaplan

CSLI

Lecture Notes

Distributed for CSLI Publications

1-881526-82-8

Hardback $49.95

1-881526-81-X

Paperback $22.95

Practical Guide

to Syntactic Analysis

Georgia Green and Jerry Morgan

This book is a brief account of the

so-called "standard" theory, and of how

the current frameworks for syntactic

description have evolved to differ from

it. The volume also provides a context

for understanding both older and current

issues in linguistic literature.

CSLI

Lecture Notes

Distributed for CSLI Publications

1-57586-017-1

Hardback $49.95

1-57586-016-3

Paperback $22.95

Quantifiers, Deduction,

and Context

Makoto Kanazawa,

Christopher Pi~6n,

and Henriette de Swart, Editors

The contributors to this volume

discuss the current state of the art at

the borderline of logic, linguistics and

computer science.

Contributors:

Mary Dalrymple, John Lamping,

Fernando Pereira, ½jay Saraswat, Jan van Eijck,

Kees van Deemter, Megumi Kameyama, Cleo

Condoravdi, Mark Gawron, Friederike Moltmann,

Henriette de Swart

CSLI

Lecture Notes

Distributed for CSLI Publications

1-57586-005-8

Hardback $64.95

1-57586-004-X

Paperback $22.95

Logic and

Representation

Robert C. Moore

'L. [a] sharp-witted presentation...Moore

manages to delight the reader d, spite the

complex and controversial issues of artificial

intelligence...Moore's own ickas, as well as

his discussion of those by other researchers,

are all immensely rewarding because of his

crisp and unpretentious presentation. "

--Computing Reviews

CSLI

Lecture Notes

Distributed for CSLI

Publications

1-881526-16-X

Hardback $39.95

1-881526-15-1

Paperback $19.95

Logic and Information

K. Devlin

"~l bold ~fort to restore lo~c as the science

of'reasoning, thinking, and inference:...

Devlin writes with uncommon clari~y for

an interdisciplinary audience of linguists,

computer scientists, philosophers, and

mathematicians."

- - T h e

American Mathematical Monthly

49971-2

Paperback $20.95

Available

in bookstores or from

40 West 20th Street, N.Y., NY 10011-4211

Call toll-free 800-872-7423

MasterCard/VlSA

accepted.

(2)

Literary & Linguistic Computing

is an

international journal which publishes material on

all aspects of computing and information

technology applied to literature and language

research and teaching. Papers include results

of research projects, description and evaluation

of techniques and methodologies, and reports

of work in progress.

Topics covered include:

• electronic text resources

• text encoding

• hardware and software

• literary applications

• linguistic research

• lexical databases

• teaching computing techniques

I - = ( ~ j ~ i | i , : l r~j~ i i [ ~ . ] i i ! I i [~ I!~. 1 il'r~l [:.~11 i [=,] 11~ [ = ] ! i i

Text Processing Using Multilingual Resources

at the Computing Research Laboratory

J. COWlE, T. DUNNING, L. GUTHRIE,

and Y. WlLKS

Segmenting Narrative Text into Coherent Scenes

H. KOZIMA and T. FURUGORI

Recent Research in France: a Report and

Bibliography

M. JUILLARD

Towards a Corpus of Spoken Modern Greek

D. GOUTSOS, O. HATZIDAKI, and P. KING

Automated Text Analysis: Cautionary Tales

C. N. BALL

Spoken Corpus Transaction

s. CROWDY

The COFREL Project: Compiling an Old French

Dictionary

F. LANGLEY

The Federalist Revisited: New Directions in

Authorship Attribution

D. I. HOLMES and R. S. FORSYTH

A PC-KIMMO-Based Morphological Description

of Modern Greek

K. SGARBAS, N. FAKOTAKIS, and G. KOKKINAKIS

Hypertextual Representation of Literary

Working Papers

D. FERRER

The World of Woman in the Bank of English

J. NAKAMURA and J. SINCLAIR

[] Pleaseenter m y subscription t o

LITERARY & LINGUISTIC

COMPUTING

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JOOST SCH I LPEROORD

It's about time

Temporal aspects of cognitive

processes in text production

Amsterdam/Atlanta, GA 1996. 354 pp.

(Utrecht Studies in Language and Communication 6)

ISBN: 90-5183-947-2

Hfl. 100,-/US-$

67.-

A central issue of cognitive studies of text production is "What goes on

in people's minds when they produce a text?", "How do they plan the

text?", "How do they decide in what order to express their.thoughts?"

In this volume, writers are followed in their footsteps during the

moment-to-moment process of producing routine business letters. Their

writing processes are explored in

real time

with the ultimate goal to

contribute to a cognitive theory of text production. Such a theory

should tell what kind of mental structures underly text production, how

these structures are converted into coherent texts, and how this process

is framed within real writing time.

The study starts from a large corpus of real-life text production

processes. It combines methods to explore both process and product of

text production. Processes are described by analyzing the pause

patterns that emerge in the course of writing. Products are described by

analyzing their hierarchical structure. Together, these descriptions yield

several significant insights in the real time organization of cognitive

processes in production.

The study can be characterized as a cognitive linguistic approach to

text production. This volume will be of special interest to researchers in

the field of (psycho-)-Iinguistics, textlinguistics and cognitive science.

USA/Canada:

Editions Rodopi B.V., 201.5 South Park Place, Atlanta, GA

30339, Tel. (770) 933-0027,

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C O M P U T A T I O N A L

IN

LLIGEN

Edited by NICK CERCONE & GORDON McCALLA

University of Regina and University of Saskatchewan

COMPUTATIONAL INTELLIGENCE is a

leading international journal designed to

promote and stimulate research in the

field of artificial intelligence (AI).

Articles cover a wide range of AI

issues from the tools and languages of

AI to its philosophical implications.

Appealing to readers in research and

industry,

COMPUTATIONAL INTELLIGENCE

provides a forum for both experimental

and theoretical research, surveys and

impact studies •

Published in Februa~ May, August & November

ISSN" 0824-7935

Subscription rates for Computational Intefligence

Volume 12, 1996:

IndividuaL

$120.00

N. AMERICA $133.00 ROW

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$259.00N AMERICA $282.00 ROW

*Reduced rate for cscsVcms members:

$65.00

(Plus c~ proof of membership required)

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PRAGMATICS

C O G N I T I O N

Edited by Marcelo Dascal

(Tel Aviv University)

Editorial Board:

Jens Allwood

(Linguistics, University of Gothenburg),

Benny

Shanon

(Psychology, Hebrew University of Jerusalem),

Stephen Stich

(Cognitive

Science, Rutgers University),

Yorick Wilks

(Computer Science, University of

Sheffield)

Pragrnatics & Cognition

is an interdisciplinary journal that focuses on the

interrelations

between mental activity and the use of semiotic (incl. linguistic)

systems by human, animals or machines. Its scope covers a wide variety of semiotic

systems as related to a broad range of forms of mental life:

• natural language

• computer languages

• writing

• gesture

• facial expression

• ritual

• pictorial representation

• pattern recognition

• emotion, fantasy, dreaming

• conceptualization

• understanding

• creativity, humor

• problem solving

• mental modeling

Pragmatics

& Cognition seeks to explore relations of all sorts between the former

and latter: logical and causal dependence; conditions of acquisition, development or

loss; modeling, simulation and formalization; biological and neurological basis;

social and cultural variation; aesthetic expression; historical development; etc.

Special issue: On Language and Consciousness, No:

4.1 (1996)

A unique issue investigating the interrelationships of

language ~ consciousness and consciousness ---> language.

Ray Jackendoff: How language helps us think

Wallace Chafe: How consciousness shapes language

Discussion articles by:

Jens Allwood, John Barnden, Andrew Brook, Andy Clark,

Hannele Dufva and Mika Lahteenmaki, Ralph D. Ellis, Bert Peeters, and Jan Nuyts

Responses by:

Wallace Chafe and Ray Jackendoff

Price Hfl. 60,--

Subscr. price:

Vol. 4, 1996 ISSN 0929-0907: Hfl. 225,--

(Postage and handling incl.)

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Founded in 1962, the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL) is the primary scientific and

professional society for natural language processing research and applications. A European chapter was

established in 1982. Besides publishing

Computational Linguistics,

the ACL holds international meetings

(annually in North America, biennially in Europe) where the state-of-the-art in natural language

processing research and development is presented. Recently, special interest groups on the Mathematics of

Language, the Lexicon, Parsing, Generation, Computational Phonology, and Multimedia Language

Processing have been formed; others are likely to be added.

President

(1996)

Oliviero Stock

Vice-President

(1996)

Secretary-Treasurer

(1995-98)

Office Manager (1995-98)

Executive Committee

(1993-96)

(1994-96)

(1995-97)

(1996-98)

Journal Editor

Nominating Committee

(1994-96)

(1995-97)

(1996-98)

ACL EUROPEAN CHAPTER OFFICIALS

Chair

(1995-96)

Secretary

(1992-96)

Treasurer (1982-96)

Executive Committee

(1995-96)

Advisory Committee

(1993-94)

Nominating Committee

(1993-96)

(1995-98)

IRST

38050 Povo (Trento)

ITALY

(+1 39 461) 314313; [email protected]

(+1 39 461) 314591 -fax

Mitchell Marcus

University of Pennsylvania

Computer and Information Science

Philadelphia, PA 19104-6389 USA

(+1 215) 898-2538; [email protected]

Kathleen McKeown

Columbia University

Department of Computer Science

450 Computer Science Building

New York, N Y 10027, USA

(+1 212) 939-7118; [email protected]

(+1 212) 666-0140 -fax

Priscilla Rasmussen

Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL)

P.O. Box 6090, Somerset, NJ 08875, USA

(+1 908) 873-3898; (+1 908) 873-0014 fax

[email protected]

President, Vice-President, Associate Secretary-Treasurer

and Chair of the ACL European Chapter

Stuart Shieber,

Harvard University

Eduard Hovy,

USCflnformation Sciences Institute

Kathleen McCoy,

University of Delaware

Paul Jacobs,

SRA Corporation

Julia Hirschberg,

AT&T Research

Fernando Pereira,

AT&T Bell Laboratories

Karen Sparck Jones,

University of Cambridge

Douglas E. Appelt,

SRI International

Erhard Hinrichs

Universit#t Tfibingen

Abt. Computerlinguistik

Kleine Wilhelmstr. 113

D-72074 T~ibingen, Germany

(+49) 7071 29 42 79; [email protected]

Susan Armstrong

ISSCO Universite de Gem~ve

54 route des Acacias

CH-1227 Genew, SWITZERLAND

(+41 22) 705-7113; [email protected]

Michael Rosner

University of Malta

Computer Science and AI

Msida, MALTA

(+356) 3290-2504; [email protected]

Chair, Secretary, and Treasurer

Anne AbeillG

Universit~ de Paris VIII

Anne de R6eck,

University of Essex

Jan HaJik,

University of Prague

John Nerbonne,

University of Groningen

Chair, Secretary, and Treasurer

Anne AbeillG

Universit~

~ de Paris 8

Jan Jan Ha~ik,

Charles University

John Nerbonne,

University of Groningen

Nicoletta Calzolari (Chair),

lnstituto di Linguistica

Computazionale del CNR

Christian Rohrer,

Universitat Stuttgart

Ewan Klein,

University of Edinburgh

References

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