[ont.events] SUNY Buffalo CS Colloq: Lexicons, by D. Walker

rapaport@cs.buffalo.EDU (William J. Rapaport) (10/13/87)

                         UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO

                      STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK

                     DEPARTMENT OF COMPUTER SCIENCE

                               COLLOQUIUM

                LEXICONS, "THE" LEXICON, AND COMPUTATION

                            Donald E. Walker

        Artificial Intelligence and Information Science Research
                      Bell Communications Research

There has been a recent intensification of interest in the lexicon  that
is manifest in linguistics, computational linguistics, artificial intel-
ligence, and information science.   A series of workshops  have  brought
people  from a variety of backgrounds together to discuss these develop-
ments.  An attempt has been made to establish a baseline description  of
our  understanding  of  the  lexicon  (1)  in  various  research  areas:
linguistics, semantics, parsing, generation; (2) in relation to  certain
core  problems:   identifying  units,  lexicographic practice, cognitive
analysis, lexical acquisition; (3) as it affects applications:  transla-
tion,  education, information retrieval, "office" systems, personal use;
and (4) in identifying relevant  research  resources:   machine-readable
dictionaries and other reference works, lexical knowledge bases, textual
knowledge bases, products derived from interactions between lexical  and
textual  knowledge bases.  A primary objective currently being addressed
is the development of a polytheoretical lexicon in which lexical entries
are  written  so the information they contain can be used by people fol-
lowing different  theoretical  approaches.   In  addition,  efforts  are
underway  to  create shareable resources that can be used by the various
groups  working  in  this  area.   The long-range implications of  these
activities  are  critical  for further work on a broad range of problems
associated with natural language.

                            5 November 1987
                               3:30 P.M.
                         Knox 4, Amherst Campus

      Coffee and danish will be served at 4:30 P.M., 224 Bell Hall

             For further information, call (716) 636-2863.