ACH/ALLC '95 program

Eric Dahlin (hcf1dahl@ucsbuxa.ucsb.edu)
Wed, 14 Jun 95 12:24:56 PDT

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ACH/ALLC '95, July 11-15, 1995
University of California, Santa Barbara
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Tentative Program (subject to change)

Sunday, July 9
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1 pm onward dormitory check-in Anacapa Hall

Monday, July 10
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1 pm onward dormitory check-in Anacapa Hall
8 to 10 am registration for TEI workshop Anacapa Hall
9 am to 4 pm TEI Workshop Microcomputer Lab

Tuesday, July 11
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9 am onward dormitory check-in Anacapa Hall
8 to 10 am ALLC Committee Anacapa Hall
10 am to 12 noon ACH Executive Council Anacapa Hall
1 to 4 pm tour of Santa Barbara [departing from]
2 to 7 pm registration Anacapa Hall
5:30 pm opening session [location]
Welcome:
Nancy Ide, President, ACH; Susan Hockey, Chairman, ALLC
Opening address:
Walter E. Massey, Provost and Senior Vice President,
Academic Affairs, University of California
"Surfing the Net: What New Technologies Mean for Education"

7:00 pm reception Lagoon Patio
8:00 pm banquet Corwin Room

Wednesday, July 12
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8 am to 3 pm registration Corwin Lobby
9 to 10:30 am Plenary Session Corwin West
Keynote address:
Stanley Katz, President, The American Council of
Learned Societies
"Constructing the Humanities Community for the Digital Age"

10:30 to 11 am coffee break [location]
11 am to 5:30 pm software demonstrations, Corwin East
posters, book and
vendor displays

11 am to 12:30 pm Sessions 1-A and 1-B

Session 1-A, 11 am to 12:30 pm [location]
Computational lexicons, corpora
Chair: [name and affiliation]

Mining COMLEX for Syntactic Data: An On-line Dictionary as a
Resource for Research in Syntax for Linguists at Large
Catherine Macleod, Adam Meyers, and Ralph Grishman,
New York University

Constructing A Knowledge Base for Describing the
General Semantics of Verbs
Sophie Daubeze, IRIT-CNRS, URACOM Parc Technologique du canal;
Patrick Saint-Dizier, IRIT-CNRS; Palmira Marrafa

The Corpus and the Citation Archive--Peaceful Coexistence Between
the Best and the Good?
Christian-Emil Ore, University of Oslo

Session 1-B, 11 am to 12:30 pm [location]
Stylistics
Chair: [name and affiliation]

Mapping the "Other Harmony" of Prose: A Computer Analysis of John
Dryden's Prose Style
Mary Mallery, The Center for Electronic Texts in the Humanities

Neural Network Applications in Stylometry: The Federalist Papers
F. J. Tweedie, S. Singh, and D.I. Holmes, University of the
West of England, Bristol

Language and Style in Golding's _The Inheritors_: An Eclectic,
Computer-Assisted Approach
David L. Hoover, New York University

12:30 to 2 pm lunch

2 to 3:30 pm Sessions 2-A and 2-B

Session 2-A, 2 to 3:30 pm [location]
Panel
Chair: Nancy Ide, Vassar College

The Information Superhighway and the Humanities:
Will Our Needs Be Met?
Charles Henry, Vassar College; Nancy Ide, Vassar College;
Stanley Katz, The American Council of Learned Societies;
Elli Mylonas, Brown University

Session 2-B, 2 to 3:30 pm [location]
Linguistics (software)
Chair: [name and affiliation]

Behind the Scenes: Building a Tool for
Verb Classification in French
Rachel Panckhurst, Universite Paul Valery, Montpellier III

From Linguistic Resources to Applications With the ZStation:
A New Approach to Linguistic Engineering in Research and Teaching
Henri C. Zingle, LILLA, University of Nice

The Linguistic Postprocessor of SCRIPT: A System for the
Recognition of Handwritten Input Using Linguistic and
Statistical Filter Mechanisms as well as a Crossword Lexicon
Bettina Harriehausen-Muhlbauer, IBM Germany, Science Center

3:30 to 4 pm coffee break [location]

4 to 5:30 pm Sessions 3-A, 3-B, and 3-C

Session 3-A, 4 to 5:30 pm [location]
Panel
Chair: [name and affiliation]

Collaboration Between Humanities Scholars and
Computer Professionals
John Unsworth (moderator), John Dobbins, Susan Gants, Jerome
McGann, and Thornton Staples, Institute for Advanced Technology
in the Humanities(IATH), University of Virginia

Session 3-B, 4 to 5:30 pm [location]
Encoding issues
Chair: [name and affiliation]

You Can't Always Get What You Want: Deep Encoding of
Manuscripts and the Limits of Retrieval
Michael Neuman, Georgetown University

Using the TEI to Encode Textual Variations:
Some Practical Considerations
Gregory Murphy, The Center for Electronic Texts in the
Humanities

Implementing the TEI's Feature-Structure Markup by
Direct Mapping to the Objects and Attributes of an
Object-Oriented Database System
Gary F. Simons, Summer Institute of Linguistics

Session 3-C, 4 to 5:30 pm
UCSB Demonstrations [to be announced]

6 pm ACH open meeting [location]
8 pm Text Encoding Initiative (TEI) [location]
open session

Thursday, July 13
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9 am to 5:30 pm software demonstrations, Corwin East
posters, book and
vendor displays

9 to 10:30 am Sessions 4-A and 4-B

Session 4-A, 9 to 10:30 am [location]
Panel
Chair: [name and affiliation]

The Information Superhighway and the Humanities:
An International Perspective
Jane Rosenberg, NEH; [other panelists and affiliations]

Session 4-B, 9 to 10:30 am [location]
Computer Assisted Instruction
Chair: [name and affiliation]

Architext: A Hypertext Application for
Architectural History Instruction
Mark R. Petersen, Clarkson University

Teaching Critical Thinking with Interactive Courseware:
An Experiment in Evaluation
Jill LeBlanc and Geoffrey M. Rockwell, McMaster University

Watching Scepticism: Computer Assisted Visualization and
Hume's _Dialogues_
Geoffrey M. Rockwell, McMaster University; John Bradley,
University of Toronto

10:30 to 11 am coffee break [location]

11 am to 12:30 pm Sessions 5-A and 5-B

Session 5-A, 11 am to 12:30 pm [location]
Internet, World Wide Web, Hypertext
Chair: [name and affiliation]

TACT & WWW: Argument and Evidence on the Internet
John D. Bradley, University of Toronto; Geoffrey M. Rockwell,
McMaster University

Art History and the Internet
Michael Greenhalgh, Australian National University

The Labyrinth, the World Wide Web, and the Development of
Disciplinary Servers in the Humanities
Deborah Everhart and Martin Irvine, Georgetown University

Session 5-B, 11 am to 12:30 pm [location]
Annotation
Chair: [name and affiliation]

Man-Machine Cooperation in Syntactic Annotation
Hans van Halteren, University of Nijmegen

Man vs. Machine--Which is the Most Reliable Annotator?
Gunnel Kallgren, Stockholm University

Standards in Morphosyntax: Towards a Ready-to-Use Package
Nicoletta Calzolari and Monica Monachini, Istituto di
Linguistica Computazionale (CNR), Pisa

12:30 to 2 pm lunch

2 pm to 3:30 pm, Sessions 6-A and 6-B

Session 6-A, 2 pm to 3:30 pm [location]
Project session
Chair: [name and affiliation]

ACCORD: a New Approach to Digital Resource Development
Using the Testbed Method
Mary Keeler, University of Washington; Christian Kloesel,
Indiana University

Yearning to be Hypertext: The Cornell Wordsworth and
the Limits of the Codex
Bruce Graver, Providence College

The Shakespeare Multimedia Project:
An Exploration in Constructivist Pedagogy
Leslie D. Harris, Susquehanna University

Session 6-B, 2 pm to 3:30 pm [location]
Text Databases
Chair: [name and affiliation]

Problems of Multidatabase Construction for
Linguistic and Literary Research
Richard Giordano and Carole Goble, University of Manchester;
Gunnel Kallgren, Stockholm University

A Data Architecture for Multi-lingual Linguistic Corpora
Nancy Ide, Vassar College; Jean Veronis, Laboratoire Parole et
Langage, CNRS, Aix-en-Provence; David Durand, Boston University

On the Text Based Database Systems for Public Service
Shoichiro Hara and Hisashi Yasunaga, National Institute of
Japanese Literature

3:30 to 4 pm coffee break [location]

4 to 5:30 pm, Sessions 7-A, 7-B, and 7-C

Session 7-A, 4 to 5:30 pm [location]
Panel
Chair: [name and affiliation]

Model Editions Partnership Panel
David R. Chesnutt, University of South Carolina; Ann D. Gordon,
Rutgers University; C. M. Sperberg-McQueen, University of
Illinois at Chicago

Session 7-B, 4 to 5:30 pm [location]
Translation, computational lexicography
Chair: [name and affiliation]

The Terminology of Bioenergy: A Project in Progress
Lisa Lena Opas, University of Joensuu

LOCOLEX: The Translation Rolls Off Your Tongue
Daniel Bauer, Fridirique Segond, and Annie Zaenen, RANK XEROX
Research Centre

Parallel Corpora, Translation Equivalence and
Contrastive Linguistics
Raphael Salkie, University of Brighton

Session 7-C, 4 to 5:30 pm
UCSB Demonstrations [to be announced]

6 pm ALLC open meeting [location]

Friday, July 14
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9 am to 5:30 pm software demonstrations, [location]
posters, book and
vendor displays

9 to 10:30 am, Sessions 8-A and 8-B

Session 8-A, 9 to 10:30 am [location]
Special session: Humanities Computing Support
Chair: Espen Ore, University of Bergen

World Bank Support for the Development of Foreign Language
Education at Lajos Kossuth University, Debrecen, Hungary
Laszlo Hunyadi, Lajos Kossuth University

Application of Computers in Language Training in the
Post-Soviet Ukraine
Peter I. Serdiukov, Kiev State Linguistic University

Creating a Multi-Lingual Hypertext:
A CSCW Project in the Humanities
Catherine Scott, University of North London

Session 8-B, 9 to 10:30 am [location]
Word studies, statistics
Chair: [name and affiliation]

Experiments in Word Creation
Michael Levison and Greg Lessard, Queen's University, Kingston,
Ontario

A Multivariate Test for the Attribution of Authorship
F.J. Tweedie, University of the West of England, Bristol;
C. A. Donnelly, University of Edinburgh

The Randomness Assumption in Word Frequency Statistics
R. Harald Baayen, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics,
Nijmegen, The Netherlands

10:30 to 11 am coffee break [location]

11 am to 12:30 pm, Sessions 9-A and 9-B

Session 9-A, 11 am to 12:30 pm [location]
Panel
Chair: [name and affiliation]

Electronic Resources for Literary Studies
Kathryn Sutherland, Nottingham University; Lou Burnard and Alan
Morrison, Oxford University Computing Services

Session 9-B, 11 am to 12:30 pm [location]
Corpus Linguistics
Chair: [name and affiliation]

Perception Nouns in the Italian Reference Corpus:
Argument Structure and Collocational Uses
Adriana Roventini and Monica Monachini, Istituto di Linguistica
Computazionale (CNR), Pisa

Investigating Verbal Transitions with P.R.O.U.S.T.
Tony Jappy, University of Perpignan

A Corpus-Based Study of Nonfinite and
Verbless Adverbial Clauses in English
Magnus Ljung, Stockholm University

12:30 to 2 pm lunch

2 to 3:30 pm, Sessions 10-A and 10-B

Session 10-A, 2 to 3:30 pm [location]
Authorship attribution
Chair: [name and affiliation]

Word-Type at "Sentence" Beginning and End: A Reliable
Discriminator of Authorship of Latin Prose Texts?
Bernard Frischer, University of California, Los Angeles

Wordprinting Francis Bacon
Noel B. Reynolds and John L. Hilton, Brigham Young University

The "Federalist" Revisited: New Directions in
Authorship Attribution
David Holmes, University of the West of England, Bristol

Session 10-B, 2 to 3:30 pm [location]
Literature, Literary Theory
Chair: [name and affiliation]

Categories, Theory, and Literary Texts
Paul A. Fortier, University of Manitoba

Tracing the Narrator: Parenthesis and Point-of-View in
Joseph Conrad's _Heart of Darkness_.
Thomas Rommel, University of Tuebingen

The Perception of Biblical Texts in Modern Literature, Illustrated
by the Lyric Poetry of Christine Busta
Susanne Bucher-Gillmayr, University of Innsbruck, Austria

3:30 to 4 pm coffee break

4 to 5 pm Discussion Groups 1 and 2

Discussion Group 1, 4 to 5 pm [location]

The Future of HUMANIST
Willard McCarty, University of Toronto
(discussion leader)

Discussion Group 2, 4 to 5 pm [location]

Perspectives on the Need for Behavioral Change in
the Humanities: Response to the Information Age
Mary Keeler, University of Washington
(discussion leader)

6 pm beach barbecue Goleta Beach

Saturday, July 15
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9 to 10:30 am Sessions 11-A and 11-B

Session 11-A, 9 to 10:30 am [location]
Hypertext, Text Editing
Chair: [name and affiliation]

Screen and Page: Some Questions of Design in Electronic Editions
Michael Best, University of Victoria, British Columbia

Translation Project for Vincent of Beauvais' _Speculum Naturale_
Carol Everest, King's University College, Edmonton, Alberta;
Caroline Falkner, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario;
Kevin Roddy, University of California, Davis

Text, Hypertext or Cybertext--A Typology of Textual Modes
Using Correspondence Analysis
Espen Aarseth, University of Bergen

Session 11-B, 9 to 10:30 am [location]
Linguistics, corpora
Chair: [name and affiliation]

Maestro2: An Object-Oriented Approach to
Structured Linguistic Data
Greg Lessard, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario;
Colin Gajraj, Bell Northern Research, Ottawa;
Ian Macleod, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario

A Program for Aligning English and Norwegian Sentences
Knut Hofland, The Norwegian Computing Centre for the Humanities

Contractions in ARCHER: Register and Diachronic Change
Joe Allen, University of Southern California

10:30 to 11 am coffee break [location]

11 to 11:30am closing session [location]
Remarks:
Nancy Ide, President, ACH; Susan Hockey, Chairman, ALLC;
Espen Ore, ALLC, Local Organizer, ALLC/ACH '96,
University of Bergen

12 noon to 1 pm lunch

1 to 5:30 pm winery tour [departing from]

Demonstrations
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(See separate schedule)

Cinema Studies and Interactivity: A Multimedia Computer Model
Robert Kolker, University of Maryland

CoALA-An Intelligent System for Language Acquisition Combining
Various Modern NLPTtechnologies
Bettina Harriehausen-Muhlbauer, IBM Germany, Science Center

SHAXICON--Mapping Shakespeare's "Rare Words" Across the Canon
Don Foster, Vassar College

Computerizing the Buddhist Scriptures
Supachai Tangwongsan, Mahidol University Computing Center,
Thailand

ADMYTE, A Digital Archive of Spanish Manuscripts and Texts
Charles Faulhaber, University of California, Berkeley

SYNTPARSE, For Parsing English Texts
SYNTCHECK, For Orthographical and Grammatical Spell-Checking of
English Texts
SOFTHESAURUS, An English Electronic Thesaurus
LINGUATERM, A Multilingual (English, German, French, Spanish)
Electronic Thesaurus of Linguistic Terminology
GEOATLAS, A Multilingual (English, German, French, Italian)
Electronic Thesaurus of Related Place Names
Hristo Georgiev-Good, Good Language Software, Switzerland

TUSTEP: A Scholarly Tool for Literary and Linguistic Analysis
Winfried Bader, University of Tuebingen

From Linguistic Resources to Applications with the ZStation:
A New Approach to Linguistic Engineering in Research and Teaching
Henri C. Zingle, LILLA, University of Nice

OrigENov: Integration of Multimedia into the Teaching of
Comparative Literature at Luton University
Clementine Burnley, Barbara Heins, and Carlota Larrea,
University of Luton

Posters
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(See separate schedule)

Bringing SGML and TACT Together: sgml2tdb
John Bradley, University of Toronto

NEACH Guide to World Wide Web
Heyward Ehrlich, Rutgers University

The Provenance of Christian Doctrine, attributed to John Milton:
An Evaluation of Alternative Statistical Methods
F.J. Tweedie, University of the West of England, Bristol;
T. Corns, University of Wales, Bangor; J. Hale, University of
Otago; G. Campbell, University of Leicester; D.I. Holmes,
University of the West of England, Bristol

Developing an Electronic _Thesaurus Linguae Latinae_
Ann F. DeVito, University of Saskatchewan, Consortium for
Latin Lexicography

A PROLOG Approach to Montesquieu
Pauline Kra, Yeshiva University

From Text to Test--Automatically: A Computer System for Deriving
an English Language Test from a Text
David Coniam, Chinese University of Hong Kong

An Integrated Multimedia Network for Scholarly Discovery,
Pedagogical Authoring, and Professional Presentation in the
Field of Music
Peter G. Otto, University of California, San Diego;
Nancy B. Nuzzo and Michael Long, State University of
New York at Buffalo

APL-Simulation for I Ching Hexagrams' Order Explanation
Pavel Luksha, Russia

A Minimalist View on Binding and Language Acquisition
Lily Grozeva, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences/Groningen
University

OrigENov: Integration of Multimedia into the Teaching of
Comparative Literature at Luton University
Clementine Burnley, Barbara Heins, and Carlota Larrea,
University of Luton

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