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IRList Digest Volume 4 Number 26
IRList Digest Saturday, 30 April 1988 Volume 4 : Issue 26
Today's Topics:
Call for Papers - ACM Document Processing Systems Conf.: revised dates
COGSCI - Metaphors, Memories and Modalities: Insights from Infants
News addresses are
Internet or CSNET: fox@vtopus.cs.vt.edu
BITNET: foxea@vtvax3.bitnet
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Date: Tue, 26 Apr 88 23:32 5
From: ORBETON%nuhub.acs.northeastern.edu@RELAY.CS.NET
Subject: Doc Proc 88 Due Dates Changed
Call for Participation
ACM CONFERENCE ON DOCUMENT PROCESSING SYSTEMS
Sante Fe, New Mexico
December 5 - 9, 1988
*** Revised -- Submission dates now June 10 ***
The ACM Conference on Document Processing Systems is sponsored by the
Association for Computing Machinery's Special Interest Groups on Graphics
(SIGGRAPH), Computer-Human Interaction (SIGCHI), and Office Information Systems
(SIGOIS), in cooperation with the Los Alamos National Laboratory and SIGIR
(Special Interest Group on Information Retrieval).
This inaugural, international conference examines the theory, development, and
application of document processing systems for generating, disseminating,
searching, and viewing information.
It will bring together researchers, developers, and users in the hopes that the
field's broad reaching interdisciplinary diversity will foster a rich exchange
of ideas and information that will help define the state-of-the-art and future
directions in document processing systems. One full day of courses will
precede the conference, and technical tours will follow.
Without the following key concepts and technologies, document processing would
be very different: distributed computing systems including workstation,
bitmapped displays and pointing devices; document preparation systems including
digital typography, electronic printing, laser printers and page description
languages; hypertext and hypermedia systems; social adaptation of and to
electronic media; document bases; and linguistic tools.
Document processing also encompasses the support for and management of the
document production process, through collaborative systems, shared information
spaces, multimedia documents, document release management tools, and
distribution through electronic networks and various storage media such as bar
codes, floppy and CD-ROM disks.
You are invited to submit a paper, a proposal for a course, or a panel on
Document Processing, which might be represented by these phases:
* Document creation, either by writing and editing at workstations or by
scanning and recognizing existing documents
* Document production, where editors, reviewers, designers, typesetters, and
others contribute to the presentation of the document
* Document dissemination, where readers access or retrieve documents in
either printed hardcopy or online electronic form
Technical papers, courses, and demonstrations are encouraged to address the
following:
* Foundations, formalisms, languages and grammars for document
representation
* Collaborative writing and document production process, social issues of
document systems
* System architectures, standards, and document interchange issues
* Hypertext and hypermedia, document structure, multimedia audio-visual
documents
* Document filing, document bases, indexing, retrieval, archiving
* Illustration, graphic design and typography for electronic documents
* Electronic publishing, CD-ROM publishing, electronic printing, desktop
publishing
* What's next?
Papers -- Courses -- Demonstrations --
Information for Authors Information for Instructions for
Instructors Demonstrators
Technical and survey Proposals for courses Proposals for live
papers are invited in are invited. Courses demonstrations of
all areas relevant to will be presented on experimental or
document processing Monday of the commercials systems are
systems. Technical conference week, and invited.
papers should describe may be for a half day Demonstrations are
recent work relating to (3 course hours) or for intended to showcase
significant problems, a full day (6 course systems, with the
including either hours). Course notes presence of the
research results or the will be distributed to system's author(s) most
innovative application each course attendee, desirable.
of document processing and will also be Demonstrations will be
technology or both. available for sale at accepted based on
the conference. merit, novel and
Survey papers should interesting features.
provide insightful Courses will cover a
approaches to organize wide variety of topics Other criteria are
and integrate the associated with enhancement to the
knowledge in a document processing courses and technical
particular area. techniques, and will program, and overall
Papers will be selected complement the feasibility.
according to their technical program by Commercial
originality, providing more depth in demonstrations
methodology, citations, specific topic areas. (marketing or sales)
and presentation Selected courses will are unacceptable.
quality. educate practitioners.
Demonstrations should
Technical and survey Course selection will not exceed 30 minutes.
papers must be written be based on the Proposal must include a
in English. Papers importance of the topic one-page description of
must not exceed 15 and on the expertise the demonstration and
pages inclusive of and experience of the the demonstrators'
illustrations and must instructor(s). names, affiliation, and
be doublespaced or role in the development
typeset 10/18 on 8.5 x Proposals must include of the system.
11 paper (about 7,000 a brief description of Demonstrators are
words). Papers with the course material, a expected to provide
multiple authors should detailed outline their own equipment or
clearly state the (including the topics, share equipment with
primary contact person the proposed speakers other demonstrators.
and provide appropriate for each topic, and the For details contact the
address information. duration of each Demonstrations chair.
All accepted papers topic), biographical
will be published in information on all
the conference proposed speakers, and
proceedings, and the prerequisites for the
authors will be course. If the course
required to sign an ACM material has been
copyright form. presented in the past,
please explain and
include on copy of the
course material used.
Submit three copies of Submit three copies of Submit three copies of
each paper to: the course proposal to: the demonstration
proposal to:
Rick Beach Gail Rein Manuel Vigil
Xerox PARC MCC Software Technology Los Alamos National
3333 Coyote Hill Road Program Laboratory
Palo Alto, CA 94304 9390 Research Blvd. Computer Graphics Group
4l5/494-4822 Austin, TX 78759 MS B272
Beach.pa@xerox.com 512/338-3303 Los Alamos, NM 87545
Rein@mcc.com 505/667-7356
MBV@lanl.gov
Important Dates: Important Dates: Important Dates:
Papers due: June 10, Course proposals due: Demonstration proposals due:
1988 June 10, 1988 June 10, 1988
Acceptance Acceptance Acceptance notification:
notification: July 7, notification: July 18, July 18, 1988
1988 1988
Final version due: Final version of
September 1, 1988 classroom materials
*** revised *** due: September 1, 1988
Conference Committee Program Committee
Conference Chair: Robert B. Allen, Bellcore
Ann Solem, Los Alamos National Laboratory Richard Beach, Chair, Xerox PARC
Program Chair: Heather Brown, University of
Richard Beach, Xerox PARC Kent, England
Courses Chair: Stavros Christodoulakis,
Gail Rein, MCC Software Technology Program University of Waterloo,
Demonstrations Chair: Canada
Manuel Vigil, Los Alamos National Laboratory Richard Furuta, University of
Local Arrangements Chair: Maryland
Jan Sander, Los Alamos National Laboratory Simon Gibbs, MCC
Publicity Chair: Irene Greif, Lotus
Peter Orbeton, Lotus Development Vania Joloboff, Bull/IINRIA,
Registration Chair: France
Lynne Price, Hewlett-Packard Brian Kernighan, AT&T Bell Labs
Treasurer: David Levy, Xerox PARC
Ray Elliott, Los Alamos National Laboratory Dario Lucarella, Universita di
Milano, Italy
Robert Morris, Interleaf
Dick Phillips, Los Alamos
National Laboratory
Brian Reid, DECWRL
Richard Rubinstein,DEC
Jan Walker, Symbolics
Tom Wright, Computer Associates
For other conference information, contact Peter Orbeton at 617/577-8500 or
Orbeton.chi@xerox.com
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 1 May 1988 11:36 EDT
From: Peter de Jong <DEJONG%OZ.AI.MIT.EDU@XX.LCS.MIT.EDU>
Subject: Cognitive Science Calendar [Extract - Ed.]
Date: Friday, 29 April 1988 08:51-EDT
From: Dori Wells <DWELLS at G.BBN.COM>
Re: Language & Cognition Seminar
BBN Science Development Program
Language & Cognition Seminar Series
METAPHORS, MEMORIES AND MODALITIES: INSIGHTS FROM INFANTS
Sheldon H. Wagner
Department of Psychology
University of Rochester
BBN Laboratories Inc.
10 Moulton Street
Large Conference Room, 2nd Floor
10:30 a.m., Friday, May 6, 1988
Absract: Human infants are linguistically and experientially immature and
yet they show evidence of complex cognitive judgments some of which might be
thought solely to be in the province of language users. Examples of these are
"metaphorical" recognition of similarities between physically dissimilar
events and the recognition of objects presented separately to different
modalities. Evidence for these abilities and a putative amodal code that
subserves them will be presented along with a model of visual recognition
memory that can serve as a useful metric for quantifying the rate of
information-processing of infants of varying ages. Concurrrent validity for
the model will be examined by comparing performances of infants of varying
ages under different experimental conditions and by comparing these results
to those obtained from infants born under medically compromising conditions
such as birth asphyxia, intraventricular hemorrhage and severe prematurity.
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END OF IRList Digest
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