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THE ORIGINS

OF GRAMMAR

Evidence from

Early Language

Comprehension

Kathy Hirsh-Pasek

and Roberta Michnick Golinkoff

The authors use the results of

empirical studies to advance a

novel theory of language learning

that emphasizes the role of

multiple cues and forces in

development.

Language,

Speech,

and Communication program. A Bradford Book 240 pp., 10 illus. $30.00

THE

GENERATIVE

LEXICON

James Pustejovsky

The Generative Lexicon

presents a

novel and exciting theory of

lexical semantics that addresses

the problem of the "multiplicity

of word meaning.".

The

first

formally elaborated theory of a

generative approach to word

meaning, it lays the foundation

for an implemented computa-

tional treatment of word

meaning that connects explicitly

to a compositional semantics.

Language, Speech, and Communication program. A Bradford Book 312 pp. $35.00

To order call ton-free 1-800-356-0343 (US & Canada) or (617) 625-8569. MC/VISA/AmEx accepted. Prices higher outside the U.5. and subject to change without notice.

http:llwww-mitpress.mit.edu

THE EVOLUTION OF

COMMUNICATION

Marc D. Hauser

Argues that understanding the

evolution, structure, and function

of human language requires a

comparative framework that

integrates studies of nonhuman

animal communication. This book

looks at species in their natural

environments as a way to begin to

understand the real analysis units

of communicating systems.

A Bradford Book

592 pp., 214 illus. $55.00

LANGUAGE

AND SPACE

edited by Paul Bloom,

Mary A. Peterson, Lynn Nadel,

and Merrill F. Garrett

"The authors contributing to this

volume are an outstanding set of

psychologists, neuroscientists, and

linguists who have in common an

interest in one or another aspect

of the relation between language

and space. The chapters

themselves live up to the promise

of such an illustrious author list."

-- Martha Farah, University of

Pennsylvania

Language, Speech, and Communication

program. A Bradford Book

672 pp., 117 illus. $45.00

SYNTACTICA

NeXTStep Edition

Richard K. Larson,

David S. Warren,

Juliana Freire de Lima e Silva,

and Konstantinos Sagonas

This software and accompanying

manual introduces Syntactica, an

innovative teaching tool that is

designed to let the user explore

natural language structure in an

engaging, interactive way.

Manual plus NeXTStep software for PCs and NeXTStations running NeXTStep version 3.2 or higher

(2)

N E W F R O M C A M B R I D G E A N D CSLI

Linguistics and

Computation

Jennifer S. Cole, Georgia M. Green,

and Jerry L. Morgan, Editors

This collection covers 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

Distrlbuted f o r CSLI Publications

1-881526-82-8 Hardback $49.95

1-881526-81-X Paperback $22.95

Formal Issues in Lexical-

Functional G r a m m a r

Mary Dalrymple,

Ronald M. Kaplan, John T. Maxwell III,

and Annie Zaenen, Editors

Presenting work from the Xerox Palo Alto

Research Center, Stanford University, and

others, this volume links mathematical and

computational issues and the analysis of

particular linguistic phenomena in areas

such as wh-constructions, anaphoric

binding, word order and coordination.

Contributors:

Joan Bresnan, Mary Dalrymple,

Per-Kristian Halvorsen, Mark Johnson, RonaM M.

Kaplan, John T. Maxwell III, Klaus Netter, Jurgen

Wedekind, Annie Zaenen

CSLI Lecture Notes

Distributed f o r CSLI Publications

1-881526-37-2

Hardback

$47.50

1-881526-36-4

Paperback $18.95

Speech Acts and

Conversational Interaction

Michael L. Geis

This study proposes a new theory of

speech acts, Dynamic Speech Act Theory.

It is predicated on the assumption that

speech act theory, if it is to be of genuine

empirical and theoretical significance,

must be embedded within a general

theory of conversational competence

capable of accounting for how we do

things with words in naturally occurring

conversation, and it synthesizes traditional

speech act theory, conversation analysis,

and artificial intelligence research in

natural language processing.

46499-4

Hardback

$54.95

Second Position ClJtic and

Related Phenomena

Aaron L. Halpern and

Arnold M. Zwicky, Editors

This collection focuses on a special type of

pronouns and auxiliary verbs, known as

clitics, which have a unique grammar. The

book compares several different languages

to see their similarities and differences.

Contributors:

Pilar Barbosa, Joseph M. Fontana,

Andrew Garrett, Liliane Haegeman, Mark Hale,

Hans Hock, Eloise Jelinek, Patrick McConvell,

Chiyo Nishida, Susan Pintzuk, Liljiana Progovac,

Vesna Radanovic-Kocic, Steven Schiiufele, Ann

Taylor, Jindrich Toman, Olga Miveska Tomic,

Dieter Wanner, C. Jan-Wouter Zwart

CSLI Lecture Notes

Distributed f o r CSLI Publications

1-57586-015-5

Hardback

$49.95

1-57586-014-7

Paperback

$22.95

Announcing a new series...

Studies in Logic,

Language and

Information

Robin Cooper and

Maarten De Rijke, Series Editors

This is the official book series of the Euro-

pean Association for Logic, Language and

Information (FoLLI). The scope of this

series is the logical and computational

foundations of natural, formal, and pro-

gramming languages, as well as the

different forms of human and mechanized

inference and information processing.

M e a n i n g and Partiality

Reinhard Muskens

This book develops a theory of meaning in

ordinary language. The theory is strictly for-

malized on the basis of formal logic and the

book contributes to the general discipline of

Formal Semantics. Within this field it offers

a synthesis between two leading paradigms.

Studies in Logic, Language and Information

Distributed f o r CSLI Publications

1-881526-80-1

Hardback

$64.95

1-881526-79-8

Paperback

$22.95

Available

in bookstores or from

CAMBRIDGE

U N I V E R S I T Y

P R E S S

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

Call toll-free 800-872-7423

(3)

Jiirgen Handke

THE

Structure

OF TH

Lexicon

Human versus Machine

This interdisciplinary book investigates the central component of

natural language processing: the lexicon. In integrating linguistic,

psycholinguistic, and computational approaches towards the

lexicon, a mental model is developed which serves as the basis

of an efficient lexicon implementation. This volume is meant for

linguists, psychologists, and computer scientists, and all who are

interested in natural language phenomena.

Jiirgen Handke is Professor of English and American Studies at the

Philipps-University Marburg, Germany.

1995 • xi + 388

pages

Cloth

$85.00 • ISBN 3-11-014732-7

Paper

$38.00 • ISBN 3-11-014786-6

(Natural Language Processing 5)

Mouton de Gruyter

Price subject to change

Walter de Gruyter

For North America:

Walter de Gruyter, Inc.

200 Saw Mill River Road • Hawthorne, N Y 10532

Tel: (914)747-0110. Fax: (914)747-1326

(4)

Linguist

Highly respected for its sustained

quality of scholarship,

Linguistic h

the field in research on current topJ

theory. Issue after issue,

LI

keeps

of new theoretical developments b ~

the latest in international research.

Select Recent and Forthcoming

AJ

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Agreement

Maria Bittner and Ken J

Nonsyllabic Analysis of Voice AssJ

in Polish

Jerzy Rubach

More on Reanalysis Hypotheses

and Paul M. Postal

VP-Internal Structure and Object S

Icelandic

Chris Collins and H6skula

On Distinguishing A-Bar Moveme:

Peter W. Culicover

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Computational Linguistics

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should begin with an informative abstract of approximately 150-250 words. Manuscripts must

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Submissions may be made in any of the following categories:

Papers: This category includes contributions that report significant new research results in com-

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length of a paper depends on its content, but it is suggested that manuscripts be limited to forty

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(8)

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 NorthAmerica, 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, NY 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,

USC/Information 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

Universitdt Tidbingen

Abt. Computerlinguistik

Kleine Wilhelmstr. 113

D-72074 Tiibingen, Germany

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

Susan Armstrong

ISSCO Universite de Gen~ve

54 route des Acacias

CH-1227 Geneve 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 Abeill6,

Universitd de Paris VIII

Anne de Roeck,

University of Essex

Jan Ha~ik,

University of Prague

John Nerbonne,

University of Groningen

Chair, Secretary, and Treasurer

Anne Abeill6,

Universit~ de Paris 8

Jan Jan Ha~ik,

Charles University

John Nerbonne,

University of Groningen

Nicoletta Calzolari (Chair),

Instituto di Linguistica

Computazionale del CNR

Christian Rohrer,

Universitflt Stuttgart

Ewan Klein,

University of Edinburgh

References

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