Nos, az oraim nem 17-en, hanem 16-an (hetfon) kezdodnek, es 17,
18, 19, 23 es 24-en folytatodnak. Mondjuk du. 4, Izabella utca,
pontosabbat meg nem tudok.
Csibra Gergely
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHAMPTON DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHOLOGY
CHAIR IN PSYCHOLOGY AND HEALTH
The Department of Psychology at Southampton is currently experiencing a
period of rapid growth and change. The newly established Chair in
Psychology and Health is a key element in this restructuring process.
The appointee will provide professorial leadership for one of the three
key research groupings in the Department [the other two being (2)
Learning and Development and (3) Cognitive Psychology] contributing to
its overall research as well as its teaching programmes, particularly
at the postgraduate level. The appointment will also facilitate
interdisciplinary research in the Faculty of Social Sciences and the
new Faculty of Medicine, Health, and Biological Sciences.
The Department seeks a person whose record of research, publication,
and achievement in psychology is of international standing. In addition
to an exemplary track record of personal research, an essential
requirement is the capacity to facilitate the research of others.
The relationship between psychology and health is to be interpreted
broadly, including, inter alia: mental health, occupational health,
health behaviours, child health, impact of illness on cognitive and
emotional function.
Informal enquiries to Prof. Bob Remington (HoD) Email: RER(a)psy.soton.ac.uk
Tel: 44-703-592612; Fax: 44-703-594597;
Closing date for applications: 17th February 1995.
Further particulars about the department and the university can be
retrieved by archie, gopher, www or anonymous ftp from:
ftp://cogsci.ecs.soton.ac.uk/pub/harnad/chair
or
http://cogsci.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~harnad
Kedves KOGLIST olvaso1k!
Elne1ze1st ke1rek mindazokto1l, akik Gergely Gyo2rgy elo3ada1sa1t
olvashatatlan forma1ban kapta1k meg az e1kezetes karakterek miatt. Az
1-2-3 ko1dola1su1 va1ltozat ugyanott, gergely.123 ne1ven tala1lhato1,
ennek baj ne1lku2l a1t ke1ne mennie az angolsza1sz levelezo3
rendszereken is.
Ujva1ri Gabor
--
Gabor Ujvari | Institute for Psychology, Budapest, HUNGARY
ujvari(a)cogpsyphy.hu | Tel.: (36) 1 153-3244 Fax: (36) 1 269-2972
--- Forwarded message follows ---
From: plo(a)aber.ac.uk (PATRICK LUKE OLIVIER)
Subject: CFP: Spatial Expressions
Date: 14 Dec 1994 18:42:31 GMT
<<FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS>> <<FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS>> <<FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS>>
<<FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS>> <<FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS>> <<FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS>>
<<FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS>> <<FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS>> <<FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS>>
IJCAI-95 Workshop on the
Representation and Processing of Spatial Expressions
Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (IJCAI-95)
Montreal, Canada
1 day during 19th-21st August 1995
ORGANISING COMMITTEE
Klaus-Peter Gapp (Saarbruecken, Germany)
Jugal Kalita (Colorado, USA)
Paul Mc Kevitt (Sheffield, UK)
Amitabha Mukerjee (IIT, Kanpur, India)
Patrick Olivier (Aberystwyth, UK)
Junichi Tsujii (UMIST, Manchester, UK)
Laure Vieu (IRIT, Toulouse, France)
Wolfgang Wahlster (DFKI, Saarbruecken, Germany)
Yorick Wilks (Sheffield, UK)
WORKSHOP DESCRIPTION
People constantly relate their spatial perceptual (eg. visual) experiences to
one another, conveying the size, shape, orientation and position of objects
using a wide range of spatial expressions. The semantic treatment of such
expressions presents particular challenges for natural language processing.
The meaning representation used must be capable of distinguishing between
fine-grained sense differences and ambiguities grounded in our experiential
and perceptual structure.
On-going research projects that in part address the problem of representing
and processing spatial expressions include:
o Dialogue understanding using "mental images".
o Interfaces to multi-media systems, for example, natural language querying
of photographic databases.
o Machine translation systems, finding a systematic approach for translating
spatial expressions correctly is notoriously difficult.
o Natural language instruction of animated and virtual agents.
o Spatial queries for Geographic Information Systems (GIS).
Implicit in current interest in integrating vision and natural language
processing (AAAI-94 Workshop and AAAI-95 Fall Symposium on Integrating
Natural Language and Vision Processing) is the issue of how to understand
and generate spatial expressions. While a distinctive body of work has
addressed this particular issue, the treatment of spatial language in its own
right has typically not been fully documented. This workshop will provide a
forum for more focussed expositions both on current and past research into
the representation and processing of spatial expressions.
WORKSHOP ISSUES:
There are been many different approaches to the representation and processing
of spatial expressions including geometric schemas, semantic nets, fuzzy sets
and predicate logic. Yet most existing computational characterisations have
so far been restricted to particularly narrow problem domains, that is,
specific spatial contexts determined by overall system goals.
To date, artificial intelligence research in this field has rarely taken
advantage of studies of language and spatial cognition carried out by the
cognitive science community. One of the intentions of this workshop is to
bring together researchers from both disciplines in the belief that
artificial intelligence has much to gain from an appreciation of cognitive
theories.
In addition to presenting original research participants will be asked where
possible to address the following questions:
o How does your work draw upon, differ from, refine or extend existing
linguistic, cognitive and artificial intelligence approaches? What are the
limitations and assumptions of your approach?
o How should knowledge about space be represented? What is your underlying
knowledge representation and reasoning formalism and what issues have
motivated your choice?
o How important is the issue of cognitive plausibility?
o How should the lexicon be organised with respect to spatial prepositions
and spatially relevant words? How can multiple meanings for such words be
accommodated?
o The meaning of spatial expressions cannot be addressed in isolation. Indeed
spatial expressions are used in many different physical contexts and
environments. How should the meanings of individual spatially relevant
words be composed during processing to obtain meanings of complex spatial
expressions?
o Object knowledge is generally thought to play an important role in the
interpretation of spatial words especially spatial prepositions. How can
this be realised and are there any other factors which affect the
interpretation of spatially relevant words?
o How language dependent is your approach?
o What are the open questions?
WORKSHOP FORMAT:
o Formal presentations. These will be short to short discussion. Presenters
will be asked not only to give an account of their own research but also
include responses to questions supplied the reviewing committee.
o Small group sessions. Groups of four or five participants will address
particular problems and/or approaches and make a brief presentations back
to the workshop.
o Panel session.
o Applications session. An applications session will provide participants
with an opportunity to give demonstrations their systems (both complete
systems and systems under development).
ATTENDANCE:
It is intended that between 30 and 40 people will attend the workshop. All
workshop participant are expected to register for the main IJCAI conference.
SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS:
Electronic submission is strongly encouraged (preferably self-contained
LaTeX). Papers must be printed to 8 1/2" x 11" size. They must be a maximum
of 15 pages, each page having no more than 43 lines, lines being at most
140mm long and with 12 point type. Title, abstract, figures and references
must be included within this length limit. Four copies should be mailed to
the address below. Double sided printing is encouraged.
Patrick Olivier E-mail: plo(a)aber.ac.uk
Centre for Intelligent Systems Tel: +44 970622447
University of Wales Fax: +44 970622455
Aberystwyth
Dyfed, SY23 3DB, UK
DEADLINES:
Submission deadline: 13th March 1995
Notification of acceptance: 13th April 1995
Camera ready copy due: 27th April 1995
PUBLICATION:
Accepted papers will be published in the workshop notes/preprints by IJCAI. If
there is sufficient interest it is intended that a book will be published based
on the workshop notes.
Tisztelt Erdeklodok,
az 1995 januari visegradi Megismerestudomanyi konferencia szervezeset
matol, december 13-tol Gyori Miklostol (utazasa miatt)
RACSMANY MIHALY veszi at, cime: racsmany(a)izabell.elte.hu.
Keruenk mindenkit, a koevetkezokben erre a cimre irjon
(illetve tovabbra is a pleh(a)izabell.elte.hu-ra).
UEdvoezlettel, a szervezok.
M E G H I V O
A Magyar Pszichologiai Tarsasag Fejlodespszichologiai Szekciojanak
szervezeseben 1994. december 14-en, szerdan 16 oratol
Stefanik Krisztina
Onfelismeres autista gyermekeknel
cimmel tart eloadast. Helye: Bp., VI. Izabella u. 46, II. emelet 201.
terem.
From: MX%"redei+(a)pitt.edu" 9-DEC-1994 08:40:28.06
To: FORRAI
CC:
Subj: ANALYST
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Date: Thu, 8 Dec 1994 18:35:09 -0500 (EST)
From: Miklos Redei <redei+(a)pitt.edu>
Subject: ANALYST
To: hungphil <bekes(a)ludens.elte.hu>, Bodnar Istvan <stb(a)ludens.elte.hu>,
Feher Marta <feher_m(a)tttk.bme.hu>, Forrai Gabor
<forrai(a)osiris.elte.hu>, Kampis Gyorgy <kampis(a)ludens.elte.hu>, Kiss
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Ropolyi Laszlo <ropolyi(a)ludens.elte.hu>, Szecsenyi Tibor
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Kedves Kollegak,
Az alabbi uzenetet kaptam az ANALYST szerkesztojeteol, es ezennel eleget
teszek keresenek.
Udvozlettel,
Redei Miklos
============================================================
Miklos Redei Phone: (412) 624 0908
Center for Philosophy of Science FAX: (412) 624 3895
University of Pittsburgh email: redei+(a)pitt.edu
817 Cathedral of Learning redei(a)ludens.elte.hu
Pittsburgh, PA 15260
============================================================
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Wed, 7 Dec 94 10:35:30 GMT
From:Analysis+@sheffield.ac.uk
To: Marek Wrona <MPWRONA(a)RAMZES.UMCS.LUBLIN.PL>,
Andrzej Bilat <BILAT(a)RAMZES.UMCS.LUBLIN.PL>,
Karel Pstruzina <PSTRUZIN(a)NB.VSE.CZ>,
Miklos Redei <REDEI(a)LUDENS.ELTE.HU>
Subject: ANALYST
Dear Colleagues,
I have just been checking the latest list of subscribers to ANALYST. There
are now 585 philosophers on the list worldwide -- but, so far as I can tell,
just the four of you from Eastern Europe. I am confident that there are more
analytically-minded philosophers in Poland, the Czech Republic, Hungary etc.
who would like to receive ANALYST, but am not sure how to get the news to
them! So could I ask you to e-mail a copy of the brief notice below to your
friends and contacts who are likely to be interested (and ask them to copy
it on to *their* friends and contacts)?
Many thanks and best wishes,
------8<----cut here-------------please print out and circulate--------
=======================================================================
ANNOUNCING ANALYST
=======================================================================
WHAT IS ANALYST?
ANALYST is an experimental new supplement to the long-established
philosophy journal ANALYSIS, to be published by e-mail at about
monthly intervals. The first issue appeared in mid-November.
WHAT WILL ANALYST CONTAIN?
o A limited number of preprints of papers accepted for future
publication in ANALYSIS.
o A digest of information (e.g. about forthcoming conferences)
likely to be of particular interest to ANALYSIS readers.
o A limited amount of discussion of ANALYSIS papers may also
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WHAT WON'T IT CONTAIN?
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DO I HAVE TO BE A SUBSCRIBER TO ANALYSIS TO GET ANALYST?
No. This is a freely available supplement (just do not complain
if from time to time you are encouraged also to subscribe to
ANALYSIS!).
OK, HOW CAN I GET IT?
Simply send the one-line message
subscribe analyst Your Name
to the Sheffield list server
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NB, this is *not* the usual Analysis address. Your Name should
indeed be your name (not e.g. your email address). Try not to
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
The Editor of ANALYSIS, Peter Smith,
Dept. of Philosophy, University of Sheffield, S10 2TN. UK
E-mail: analysis(a)sheffield.ac.uk Fax:{0 or +44} 114 279 8760