Call for Papers

Call for Papers (HPSG 2012)

For several reasons and requests, we once again extend the deadline for the HPSG-2012 until April 20. Note that this is the ultimate deadline. (updated on 04/14/2012)


The 19th International Conference on Head-Driven Phrase Structure Grammar, HPSG-2012, will take place in July 18-21, 2012, at Chungnam National University in Daejeon, located in the center of South Korea.

Call for papers
Abstracts are solicited for presentations which address linguistic, foundational, or computational issues relating to the framework of Head-Driven Phrase Structure Grammar.

Invited Speakers
Hans Uszkoreit (Saarland University & DFKI, Germany)
Frank Van Eynde (University of Leuven, Belgium) (updated on July 2, 2012)

Conference Format
There will be two sessions: a main session, with 30 minute presentations, and a poster session. The poster session is intended as a means of encouraging the presentation of work that is not yet fully developed.

Prospective speakers may submit either a 5 page abstract for the main session, or a 2 page abstract for the poster session. Abstracts submitted initially for the main session may be accepted, at the discretion of the program committee, for presentation in the poster session instead.

Related Events
The conference will take place in Daejeon, South Korea, on 18-21, July 2011. It will be preceded by a day of tutorials for "Experimental Design for Linguists" on 18 July given by Philip Hofmeister (University of Essex) and a workshop on Ellipsis and Formal Grammar on 19 July. There is a separate call for papers for the workshop.

Submissions:
We will use an online submission system. All abstracts should be submitted via Linguist List's Easy Abstracts System: http://linguistlist.org/confcustom/hpsg2012.

Abstracts will be reviewed anonymously by at least two reviewers. Abstracts should not include the authors' names and authors are asked to avoid self-references. The Program Committee reserves the right to reassign accepted papers from the main conference to the workshop, and vice versa.

Please direct any questions to the Program Committee Chair, Jong-Bok Kim, at hpsg2012program@gmail.com.

Important Dates
Abstract submission deadline: March 31, 2012
Extended abstract submission deadline: April 10, 2012
Extended abstract submission deadline: April 20, 2012
Notification of acceptance: April 27, 2012
Conference: July 18-21, 2012
Camera-ready version submission deadline: October 15, 2012 (updated on 04/14/2012)

Program Committee

 
Anne Abeillé Doug Arnold
Emily M. Bender Francis Bond
Oliver Bonami Bob Borsley
Rui Chaves Ann Copestake
Berthold Crysmann Elisabet Engdahl
Dan Flickinger Jong-Bok Kim (Chair)
Tibor Kiss Jean-Pierre Koenig
Valia Kordoni Bob Levine
Laura Michaelis Stefan Müller
Tsuneko Nakazawa Jeff Runner
Ivan Sag Manfred Sailer
Frank Van Eynde Gert Webelhuth
Eun-Jung Yoo Stephen Wechsler
Shuichi Yatabe

Publication
The conference proceedings will be published online by CSLI publications. A call for contributions to the publications will be issued after the conference. Proceedings of previous conferences are available at http://csli-publications.stanford.edu/HPSG/. The final deadline for receipt of written versions of conference papers is October 15, 2012 (updated on 04/14/2012).

Submission Web Site
http://linguistlist.org/confcustom/hpsg2012

Conference Web Site
http://linguistics.cnu.ac.kr/hpsg/

Local Organizing Committee Chair
Byong-Rae Ryu (Chungnam National University, hpsg2012@gmail.com)

Supported by
Department of Linguistics, Chungnam National University (CNU)
Center for Speech-Language Pathology (CSLP), CNU
Center for Language and Communication Research (CLCR), CNU
The Korean Society for Language and Information (KSLI)
Korea Research Foundation (KRF)
Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute (ETRI)
Korea Institute of Science and Technology Information (KISTI)


Call for Papers (Ellipsis Workshop)

Call for papers
Abstracts are solicited for presentations which address linguistic, foundational, or computational issues relating to ellipsis phenomena and its interactions with formal syntax and semantics.
The aim of the workshop is to further current research on ellipsis within the HPSG community, and to encourage cross-framework discussion of ellipsis and its interface to syntax and semantics. Thus, we strongly encourage researchers from outside the HPSG framework to submit.

Invited Speakers
Mark Steedman (University of Edinburgh)

Workshop Format
There will be two sessions: a main session, with 30 minute presentations (plus 10 min discussion), and a poster session. The poster session is intended as a means of encouraging the presentation of work that is not yet fully developed.

Prospective speakers may submit either a 5 page abstract for the main session, or a 2 page abstract for the poster session. Abstracts submitted initially for the main session may be accepted, at the discretion of the program committee, for presentation in the poster session instead.

Related Events
The workshop on ellipsis is part of this year's HPSG conference, which will take place in Daejeon, South Korea, on 18-21, July 2011. It will be preceded by a day of tutorials for "Experimental Design for Linguists" on 18 July given by Philip Hofmeister (University of Essex) and followed by the HPSG 2012 to be held on 20-21, July, 2011.

Submissions:
We will use an online submission system. All abstracts should be submitted via the Easy Abstract System: http://linguistlist.org/confcustom/ellipsis2012.

Abstracts should be in PDF format. Please direct any questions to the Program Committee Chair: hpsg2012program@gmail.com.

Important Dates
Abstract submission deadline: April 17, 2012
Extended abstract submission deadline: April 29, 2012 (updated on 04/14/2012)
Notification of acceptance: May 20, 2012
Workshop: July 19, 2012
Camera-ready version submission deadline: October 15, 2012 (updated on 04/14/2012)

Program Committee:

 
Doug Arnold John Beavers
Rui Chaves Jong-Bok Kim (Chair)
Jason Merchant Stefan Müller
Myung-Kwan Park Eric Potsdam
Ivan Sag Mark Steedman
Tom Wasow Shuichi Yatabe
Eun-Jung Yoo

Publication
The workshop proceedings will be published online by CSLI Publications. Only papers presented in the main workshop session will be included in the proceedings.

A call for contributions to the proceedings will be issued after the conference. Proceedings of previous conferences are available at: http://csli-publications.stanford.edu/HPSG/. The final deadline for receipt of written versions of conference papers is October 15, 2012(updated on 04/14/2012).

Conference Web Site
http://linguistics.cnu.ac.kr/hpsg/

Local Organizing Committee Chair:
Byong-Rae Ryu (Chungnam National University, hpsg2012@gmail.com)

Supported by
Department of Linguistics, Chungnam National University (CNU),
Center for Speech-Language Pathology (CSLP), CNU,
Center for Language and Communication Research (CLCR), CNU
The Korean Society for Language and Information (KSLI),
Korea Research Foundation (KRF),
Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute (ETRI),
Korea Institute of Science and Technology Information (KISTI)

 

Invited Speakers

Hans Uszkoreit (Cancelled)


(courtesy of http://www.coli.uni-saarland.de/~hansu/)

Hans Uszkoreit is Professor and Chair of the Department of Computational Linguistics and Phonetics at Saarland University. At the same time he serves as Scientific Director at the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI) where he heads the DFKI Language Technology Lab. By cooptation he is also Professor of the Computer Science Department.

Prof. Hans Uszkoreit is one of the leading figures in natural language processing, computational linguistics, and machine translation. He has been leading many projects funded by European Union, and currently coordinator of the European Network of Excellence META-NET.

Uszkoreit studied Linguistics and Computer Science at the Technische Universität of Berlin. He co-founded the Berlin city magazine Zitty, for which he worked as an part-time editor and writer. In 1977, he received a Fulbright Grant for continuing his studies at the University of Texas at Austin. During his time in Austin he also worked as a research associate in a large machine translation project at the Linguistics Research Center. In 1984 Uszkoreit received his Ph.D. in linguistics from the University of Texas. From 1982 until 1986, he worked as a computer scientist at the Artificial Intelligence Center of SRI International in Menlo Park, Ca. While working at SRI, he was also affiliated with the Center for the Study of Language and Information at Stanford University as a senior researcher and later as a project leader.

In 1986 he spent six months in Stuttgart on an IBM Research Fellowship at the Science Division of IBM Germany. In December 1986 he returned to Stuttgart to work for IBM Germany as a project leader in the project LILOG (Linguistic and Logical Methods for the Understanding of German Texts). At the same time he also taught at the University of Stuttgart.

In 1988 Uszkoreit was appointed to a newly created chair of Computational Linguistics at Saarland University and started the Department of Computational Linguistics and Phonetics. In 1989 he became the head of the newly founded Language Technology Lab at DFKI.

Uszkoreit is Principal Investigator of the Cluster of Excellence on Multimodal Computing and Interaction of the DFG (German Science Foundation).

He has been a co-founder and principal investigator of the Special Collaborative Research Division (SFB 378) "Resource-Adaptive Cognitive Processes" of the DFG (German Science Foundation). He is also co-founder and professor of the "European Postgraduate Program Language Technology and Cognitive Systems", a joint Ph.D. program with the University of Edinburgh. He has also been PI of two other Special Collaborative Research Divisions of the DFKI.

Uszkoreit is Coordinator of the European Network of Excellence META-NET, Permanent Member of the International Committee of Computational Linguistics (ICCL), Honorary Professor at Technische Universität Berlin, Coordinator of the International Erasmus Mundus Masters Program in Language and Communication Technologies, Member of the European Academy of Sciences, Past Member of the Board of the European Language Resources Association (ELRA), Past President of the European Association for Logic, Language and Information, Past Member of the Executive Board of the European Network of Language and Speech, and serves on several international editorial and advisory boards. He is a co-founder of XtraMind Technologies GmbH, Saarbruecken (now part of attensity inc.), acrolinx gmbh, Berlin and Yocoy Technologies GmbH, Berlin. From 2005-2011, he served as Chairman of the Board of Directors of the international initiative dropping knowledge.

His current research interests are computer models of natural language understanding and production, advanced applications of language and knowledge technologies such as semantic information systems, translingual technologies, cognitive foundations of language and knowledge, deep linguistic processing of natural language, syntax and semantics of natural language and the grammar of German.

Homepage: http://www.coli.uni-saarland.de/~hansu/

CV: http://www.coli.uni-saarland.de/~hansu/hucv_eng.pdf

Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hans_Uszkoreit

Frank van Eynde


(courtesy of http://www.ccl.kuleuven.be/~frank/)

Frank Van Eynde is Professor at the Faculty of Arts and Chair of the Center for Computational Linguistics at the University of Leuven (Belgium). He was also a guest professor at the universities of Paris (1995) and Lille (2002-3).

Frank Van Eynde studied linguistics, literature and philosophy at the universities of Leuven (Belgium), Muenster (Germany), Amsterdam (the Netherlands) and Stanford (USA). He holds a BA in Language and Literature (Dutch & English), a BA in Philosophy, an MA in Linguistics, a PhD in Arts & Philosophy and topped it off with the Belgian equivalent of the German Habilitation.

He started his carreer at the Belgian Fund for Scientific Research (1980-1985), had a post-doc stint at the University of Leuven (1985-1988), returned to the Fund of Scientific Research (1988-2000), where he held a permanent position, and switched back to the University of Leuven, where he was associate professor from 2000 till 2003 and full professor since 2003.

His research is mainly in the fields of theoretical and computational syntax and semantics. At the time of his PhD (1985) and his post-doc years he focussed on the semantics of tense and aspect and on the application of that research in machine translation. Later, at the time of his Habilitation (1994) he shifted attention to syntax and the syntax-semantics interface. Much of his work since then was done in the framework of Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar and led to numerous publications. The HPSG bibliograpy lists 21 contributions, starting in 1994. Another more recent interest is in the development and the exploitation of treebanks for empirical research in syntax.

At the University of Leuven Frank Van Eynde teaches both in the Linguistics program of the Faculty of Arts and in the interdisciplinary Master of Artificial Intelligence program. Within that program he coordinates the Language and Speech option.

He co-founded the Center for Computational Linguistics in 1991 and chaired it from 1994 till 2000 and since 2004. At the Center he initiated and coordinated many projects in machine translation, natural language processing and corpus annotation, funded by various agencies, including the European Union. At the moment, the Center is coordinator of the CLARIN-EU activities in Flanders, the Dutch speaking part of Belgium.

At the Center for Computational Linguistics Frank Van Eynde hosted a long series of sunmmer schools, conferences and workshops, including the 2nd European Summer School in Language, Logic and Information (1990) and the 11th International Conference on Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar (2004).

The invited lecture focusses on the topic of agreement in clauses with a predicative complement. It is part of a more comprehensive treatment of the syntax and semantics of predicative complements that already led to contributions to the proceedings of HPSG 2008 and HPSG 2009, as well as to the proceedings of CLIN 2009 (Computational Linguistics in the Netherlands). A book length publication is currently in the final stages of preparation. The lecture will present one section of one chapter of the book.

Homepage: http://www.ccl.kuleuven.be/~frank

CV: http://www.ccl.kuleuven.be/~frank/CV.html

Mark Steedman


(courtesy of http://www.nasslli2012.com/courses/combinatory-categorial-grammar)

Mark Jerome Steedman is Professor of Cognitive Science in the School of Informatics at the University of Edinburgh, to which he moved in 1998 from the University of Pennsylvania, where he taught for many years as Professor in the Department of Computer and Information Science. He is a Fellow of the British Academy, the Royal Society of Edinburgh, and the American Association for Artificial Intelligence.

His research covers a range of problems in computational linguistics, artificial intelligence, computer science, and cognitive science, including syntax and semantics of natural language, and parsing and comprehension of natural language discourse by humans and by machine using Combinatory Categorial Grammar (CCG). Much of his current NLP research concerns wide-coverage parsing for robust semantic interpretation and natural language inference. Some of his research concerns the analysis of music by humans and machines.

Steedman graduated from the University of Sussex in 1968, with a B.Sc in Experimental Psychology, and from the University of Edinburgh in 1973, with a Ph.D. in Artificial Intelligence (Dissertation:The Formal Description of Musical Perception. Advisor: Prof. H.C. Longuet-Higgins FRS).

He has held posts as Lecturer in Psychology, University of Warwick (1977-83); Lecturer and Reader in Computational Linguistics, University of Edinburgh (1983-8); Associate and full Professor in Computer and Information Sciences, University of Pennsylvania (1988-98). He has held visiting positions at the University of Texas at Austin, the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen, and the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.

Steedman currently holds the Chair of Cognitive Science in the School of Informatics at the University of Edinburgh (1998- ). He works in computational linguistics, artificial intelligence, and cognitive science, on Generation of Meaningful Intonation for Speech by Artificial Agents, Animated Conversation, The Communicative Use of Gesture, Tense and Aspect, and Combinatory Categorial Grammar (CCG). He is also interested in Computational Musical Analysis and Combinatory Logic.

Homepage: http://homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/steedman/

CV: http://homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/steedman/papers/cv/nsf10.pdf

Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Steedman

Presentation Slides: Presentation Slides (48p, 199KB)

Philip Hofmeister


(courtesy of http://crl.ucsd.edu/people/alumni.php)

Stanford University, Stanford, CA - Ph.D. in Linguistics (2002-2007)
Hampshire College, Amherst, MA - B.A. in Linguistics and Creative Writing (1998-2002)
Linguistic Society of America, Stanford University, Stanford, CA (2007 Summer)
North American Summer School in Logic and Information, University of Indiana, Bloomington, IN (2004 Summer)
Linguistic Society of America, University of California - Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA (2001 Summer)

As of January 2012, he is Lecturer in the Department of Language and Linguistics at the University of Essex, UK.

His research is cross-disciplinary in nature, concerned broadly with what empirical evidence from sentence processing can tell us about grammar and the cognitive processes that affect comprehension throughout discourse. One line of research considers the relationship between how a mental representation is formed and how it is retrieved from memory subsequently, particularly within the domain of language comprehension. A second line of research concerns the relationship between on-line processing difficulty and judgments of acceptability and grammaticalization. Other research interests include referential form choice, discourse planning and production, resumptive pronouns, and experimental syntax.

Homepage: http://privatewww.essex.ac.uk/~phofme/

CV: http://privatewww.essex.ac.uk/~phofme/cv2012.pdf

Abstracts: View Abstract

Presentation Slides: Part1 (120p, 8.01MB) | Part2 (94p, 5.08MB) | Part3 (92p, 7.36MB)

 

Day 1 (Wednesday, July 18, 2012)

Overview

The 19th International Conference on Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar (HPSG 2012)
Chungnam National University, Daejeon, South Korea
  • The conference will take place in the Humanities building (W-7 building) on the CNU main campus.
  • The tutorials, workshop and main conference will be in Moon-Won Hall.
  • Coffee breaks and the poster session will be near Moon-Won Hall.

Day 1 (Wednesday, July 18, 2012):
Tutorial on Experimental Design for Linguists

Day 1
Tutorial
Wed.
July 18,
2012
12:00-13:00Registration open
Tutorial Session (chair: Hye Won Choi (Ewha Women's University) &
                                  Jong-Bok Kim (Kyung Hee University))
13:00-14:30Philip Hofmeister (University of Essex)
Experimental Design for Linguists 1
View Abstract | Presentation Slides (Part1, 120p, 8.01MB)
14:30-15:00Coffee break
15:00-16:30Philip Hofmeister (University of Essex)
Experimental Design for Linguists 2
View Abstract | Presentation Slides (Part2, 94p, 5.08MB)
16:30-17:00Coffee break
17:00-18:30Philip Hofmeister (University of Essex)
Experimental Design for Linguists 3
View Abstract | Presentation Slides (Part3, 92p, 7.36MB)
 

Day 2 (Thursday, July 19, 2012)

Day 2 (Thursday, July 19, 2012):
Workshop on Ellipsis and Formal Grammar

Day 2
Workshop
Thu.
July 19,
2012
08:30-09:00Registration open
Invited Talk Session (chair: Jae-Woong Choe (Korea University))
09:00-09:10Byong-Rae Ryu (Chair of LOC, Chungnam National University)
Welcoming Address
09:10-10:10 Invited Keynote Speech
Mark Steedman (University of Edinburgh)
Coordination, Ellipsis, and Information Structure
Presentation Slides (48p, 199KB)
10:10-10:30Coffee break
Session 1 (chair: Yongkyoon No (Chungnam National University)
10:30-11:10Shûichi Yatabe (University of Tokyo)
Comparison of the Ellipsis-Based Theory of Non-Constituent Coordination with its Alternatives
View Abstract
11:10-11:50Gregory M. Kobele (University of Chicago)
Eliding the Derivation A Minimalist Formalization of Ellipsis
View Abstract
11:50-12:30Hanjung Lee & Nayoun Kim (Sungkyunkwan University)
Non-Canonical Word Order and Subject-Object Asymmetry in Korean Case Ellipsis
View Abstract
12:30-13:50 Lunch break
Session 2 (chair: Hae-Yun Lee (Hankuk University of Foreign Studies))
13:50-14:30 Hee-Don Ahn (Konkuk University) & Sungeun Cho (Yeungnam University)
Fragments vs. Null Arguments in Korean
View Abstract
14:30-15:10 Yo Sato (University of Hertfordshire) & Wai Lok Tam (National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Japan)
Ellipsis of Case-Markers and Information Structure in Japanese
View Abstract
15:10-15:30 Coffee break
Session 3 (chair: Hee-Don Ahn (Konkuk University))
15:30-16:10 David Erschler (Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology, Tübingen & University of Tübingen)
Sluicing-like Phenomena and the Location of CP in Ossetic
View Abstract
16:10-16:50 Yae-Jee Kim (State University of New York at Buffalo) & Sae-Youn Cho (Kangwon National University)
Tense and Honorific Interpretations in Korean Gapping Construction: A Constraint-Based Approach
View Abstract
Social Programme (Tour):
You may choose one of the following two tour programmes.
16:50-19:00 (1) Temple tour (Donghaksa Temple)
(2) City tour (Tourist attractions in Daejeon)
 

Day 3 (Friday, July 20, 2012)

Day 3 (Friday, July 20, 2012):
Main Conference (Day 1)

Day 3
Main Conference
Fri.
July 20,
2012
08:30-09:00Registration open
Session 1 (chair: Seungho Nam (Seoul National University)
09:00-09:10Byung-Soo Park (Conference Chair, Kyung Hee University)
Opening Address
09:10-10:10Invited Keynote Speech
Frank Van Eynde (University of Leuven)
Agreement and the Treatment of Predicative Complements
View Abstract
10:10-10:30Coffee break
Session 2 (chair: Berthold Crysmann (CNRS-Laboratoire de linguistique formelle))
10:30-11:10Takafumi Maekawa (Hokusei Gakuen University Junior College)
Negative Inversion Constructions in HPSG
View Abstract
11:10-11:50Dong-woo Park (Seoul National University)
An HPSG Approach to English Comparative Inversion
View Abstract
11:50-12:30Petter Haugereid (Nanyang Technological University) & Mathieu Morey (Aix-Marseille Université)
A Left-branching Grammar Design for Incremental Parsing
View Abstract
12:30-14:30Lunch break
Session 3 (chair: Hee-Rahk Chae (Hankuk University of Foreign Studies))
14:30-15:10Mija Kim (Kyung Hee University)
On the Syntactic Types of As-Parentheticals in Korean
View Abstract
15:10-15:50Joshua Crowgey (University of Washington)
An a Priori Typology of Bipartite Negation from an HPSG Perspective
View Abstract
Session 4 (Coffee break, Posters, and Besiness Meeting)
15:50-16:10Business Meeting (Room 207)
15:50-17:10
(Posters)
Petter Haugereid (Nanyang Technological University)
The Adverb Argument Intersection Field in a Left-Branching Grammar of Norwegian
View Abstract
Sae-Youn Cho & Na-Hyun Ku (Kangwon National University)
Verbal Suffix-Repetition Construction in Korean: A Constraint- and Construction-based Approach
View Abstract
Joshua Crowgey (University of Washington)
What's a Morpheme? The Zero Dravidian Negative and Typological Universals
View Abstract
Session 4 (chair: Eun-Jung Yoo (Seoul National University))
17:10-17:50Anne Bjerre (University of Southern Denmark)
An Analysis of Danish Free Relatives
View Abstract
17:50-18:30Abdulrahman Alqurashi (University of Essex and King Abdulaziz University) & Robert D. Borsley (University of Essex)
Arabic Relative Clauses in HPSG
View Abstract
Conference Banquet
                    hosted by President of Chungnam National University
19:00-20:30 Emerald Hall (5th fl.) of Hotel INTERCITI (A shuttle bus (max. 36 persons) is available in front of the Moon-Won Hall.)
 

Day 4 (Saturday, July 21, 2012):
Main Conference (Day 2)

Day 4 (Saturday, July 21, 2012):
Main Conference (Day 2)

Day 4
Main Conference
Sat.
July 21,
2012
08:30-09:00Registration open
Session 5 (chair: Myong-Hi Chai (Chosun College of Science and Technology))
09:00-09:40Abdulrahman Alqurashi (University of Essex and King Abdulaziz University)
An HPSG Approach to Free Relatives in Arabic
View Abstract
09:40-10:20Michael Hahn (University of Tübingen)
Arabic Relativization Patterns: A Unified HPSG Analysis
View Abstract
10:20-11:00Francisco Costa & António Branco (University of Lisbon)
Backshift and Tense Decomposition
View Abstract
11:00-11:20Coffee break
Session 6 (chair: Munpyo Hong (Sungkyunkwan University))
11:20-12:00Berthold Crysmann & Olivier Bonami (CNRS-Laboratoire de linguistique formelle)
Establishing Order in Type-based Realisational Morphology
View Abstract
12:00-12:40Incheol Choi (Kyungpook National University)
Sentential Specifiers in the Korean Clause Structure
View Abstract
12:40-14:30Lunch break
Session 7 (chair: Kil Soo Ko (Seoul National University)
14:30-15:10Hiroki Koga (Saga University)
Past Affix' Selection of Verbal Stems
View Abstract
15:10-15:50Yong-hun Lee (Chungnam National University)
A Unified Approach to VP-Ellipsis and VP-Anaphora
View Abstract
15:50-16:30David Oshima (Nagoya University)
On the Semantics of the Japanese Infinitive/Gerund-Clause Constructions: Polysemy and Temporal Constraints
View Abstract
16:30-16:50Coffee Break
Session 8 (chair: Sae-Youn Cho (Kangwon National University)
16:50-17:30Sanghoun Song & Emily M. Bender (University of Washington)
Individual Constraints for Information Structure
View Abstract
17:30-18:10Juwon Lee (University of Texas at Austin)
The Direct Evidential -te in Korean: Its Interaction with Person and Experiencer Predicate
View Abstract
Session 9 (chair: Incheol Choi (Kyungpook National University))
18:10-18:30Closing Ceremony
        Byung-Soo Park (Kyung Hee University) &
        Byong-Rae Ryu (Chungnam National University)
Photographing
*Papers acepted, but not presented:
Emil Ionescu (University of Bucharest): (HPSG 2012, Oral)
                      A Hybrid Variety of Ellipsis in Romanian
Irina Nikolaeva (SOAS, University of London): (HPSG 2012, Oral)
                      A Construction-based analysis of Narrative Infinitives in French and Latin
Emil Ionescu (University of Bucharest): (Ellipsis Workshop, Oral)
                      Stripped Phrases with N-words in Romanian
Thomas Gross (Aichi University): (Ellipsis Workshop, Oral)
                      Eliding Catenae: Evidence from English, German, and Japanese
Ting-Chi Wei (National Kaohsiung Normal University): (Ellipsis Workshop, Poster)
                      Non-canonical Gaps in Chinese