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NL-KR Digest Volume 13 No. 52

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NL KR Digest
 · 20 Dec 2023

NL-KR Digest      Thu Dec  1 22:17:55 PST 1994      Volume 13 No. 52 

Today's Topics:

Announcement: New reports from IFI, University of Zurich
CFP: NLDB'95 Wkshp on NL and Data Bases, Jun 95, Versailles
CFP: ML-95 Machine Learning Tutorial Proposals, Jul 95, Tahoe
CFP: ACL-95 Corpus Workshop, Jun 95, Cambridge
CFP: AAAI Fall Symp, 95, Active Learning, Nov 95, Cambridge
Position: Machine-translation English to Vietnamese, San Jose
CFP: GWICS 4th Golden West Conf. on Intel. Sys., Jun 95, San Franciso

* * *

Subcriptions: listserv-style administrative requests to
nl-kr-request@ai.sunnyside.com.
Submissions, policy, questions: nl-kr@ai.sunnyside.com
Back issues:
FTP: ai.sunnyside.com:/pub/nl-kr/Vxx/Nyyy
/pub/nl-kr/Vxx/INDEX
Gopher: ai.sunnyside.com, Port 70, in directory /pub/nl-kr
Email: write to LISTSERV@AI.SUNNYSIDE.COM, omit subject, mail command:
GET nl-kr nl-kr_file_list
Web: http://ai.sunnyside.com/pub/nl-kr
Editors:
Al Whaley (al@ai.sunnyside.com) and
Chris Welty (weltyc@cs.vassar.edu).

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

To: comp-ai-nlang-know-rep@chx400.switch.ch
Date: Fri, 25 Nov 1994 17:41:49 +0100
From: USENET News Admin <news@ifi.unizh.ch>

Newsgroups: comp.ai.nlang-know-rep
Path: ifimac45.ifi.unizh.ch!user
From: fuchs@ifi.unizh.ch (Norbert E. Fuchs)
Subject: Announcement: New reports from IFI, University of Zurich
Message-ID: <fuchs-251194174323@ifimac45.ifi.unizh.ch>
Followup-To: comp.ai.nlang-know-rep
Sender: news@ifi.unizh.ch (USENET News Admin)
Nntp-Posting-Host: ifimac45
Organization: IFI University of Zurich
Date: Fri, 25 Nov 1994 16:43:23 GMT


(Please excuse if you see this more than once.)

The following two reports are available by anonymous ftp from

ftp.ifi.unizh.ch [130.60.48.8]

Log in as "anonymous", use your email address as your password,
specify "binary" before getting the file. Uncompress before printing.

The directory pub/techreports contains a file INDEX listing all
technical reports currently available. If you are interested in
periodical information about new IFI technical reports, e-mail to
tr@ifi.unizh.ch


File /pub/techreports/ifi-94.17.ps.Z

%0 Report
%A Fuchs, Norbert E.
%A Hofmann, Hubert F.
%A Schwitter, Rolf
%D 1994
%T Specifying Logic Programs in Controlled Natural Language
%I Department of Computer Science, University of Zurich
%8 November 94
%R 94.17
%F Fuchs et al. 94
%X Writing specifications for computer programs is not easy since
one has to take into account the disparate conceptual worlds of the
application domain and of software development. To bridge this
conceptual gap we propose controlled natural language as a
declarative and application-specific specification language.
Controlled natural language is a subset of natural language that can
be accurately and efficiently processed by a computer, but is
expressive enough to allow natural usage by non-specialists.
Specifications in controlled natural language are automatically
translated into Prolog clauses, hence become formal and executable.
The translation uses a definite clause grammar enhanced by feature
structures. Inter-text references of the specification, e.g.
anaphora, are resolved by discourse representation theory. The
generated Prolog clauses are added to a knowledge base, and
furthermore provide the input of a concept lexicon. We have
implemented a prototypical specification system that successfully
processes the greater part of the specification of a simple
automated teller machine.



File /pub/techreports/trans_dev.ps.Z

%0 Book Section
%A N. E. Fuchs, Department of Computer Science, University of Zurich
%A M. P. J. Fromherz, Xerox PARC, Palo Alto
%D 1994
%T Transformational Development of Logic Programs from Executable
Specifications P Schema-Based Visual and Textual Composition of
Logic Programs
%B Development, Test and Maintenance of Declarative AI Programs
%E Beckstein, C.
%E Geske, U.
%I Gesellschaft fr Informatik und Datenverarbeitung (GMD)
%V 238
%S GMD Studien
%F Fuchs & Fromherz 94
%X In our method P that we call Visual and Textual Composition of
Logic Programs P we have enhanced the schema-based construction of
logic programs in two ways intended to bridge the conceptual gap
between application domains and the programming domain. First, we
define visual and textual views of programs that can be used to
construct programs in application-specific concepts, and which can
be understood as executable specifications of the programs being
constructed. Second, in addition to schemata for Prolog programming
constructs and techniques we introduce a repository of application-
specific components. As a further enhancement of the method we have
added schema-based transformations to increase the efficiency of the
constructed programs. We have implemented both a program development
system and a transformation system, and used these systems to
develop programs for non-trivial applications like the well-known
library data base problem and an automated teller machine.
- - - - - - - - - - - ----
Norbert E. Fuchs Telephone +41-1-257 4313
Department of Computer Science Fax +41-1-363 0035
University of Zurich email fuchs@ifi.unizh.ch
CH-8057 Zurich, Switzerland
- - - - - - - - - - - ----

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

To: comp-ai-nlang-know-rep@moderators.univ-lyon1.fr
From: elsa@prism.uvsq.fr (Elisabeth METAIS)
Subject: CFP: NLDB'95 Wkshp on NL and Data Bases, Jun 95, Versailles
Date: 25 Nov 1994 18:16:16 GMT





N L D B ' 9 5

* First Workshop on Applications of NATURAL LANGUAGE to DATA BASES *

Versailles, France, JUNE 28-29 1995


________________________________

/ C A L L F O R P A P E R S /
________________________________




This workshop aims at bringing together researchers, potential industrial
and users, interested in various applications of natural language in the
database field. The integration of databases and natural language has been
for a long time an utopia. Since two decades, consulting databases or
getting answers in natural language remain a dream for many users. This is
nowadays an accessible convergent point for which a lot of researchers are
focusing on. It is mainly due to the large progress of research in natural
language and to the development of new technologies which allow the storage
of real semantic electronic dictionaries. Each aspect of the life cycle of
the information system may be improved by using natural language
techniques : database design (specification, validation, conflicts
resolution), database query languages and consulting programs that use new
software engineering research allowing natural language program
specifications.


TOPICS: Major Topics of interest include, but are not restricted to, the
following:
- Natural languages interfaces for database querying,
- Natural language as a specification interface for database design,
- Paraphrasing of database design conceptual schema in natural language,
- Linguistic aspects of view integration,
- Conceptual modelling and linguistic knowledge,
- Use of linguistic tools and electronic dictionaries,
- Textual databases, indexing and retrieval,
- Generating texts from structured data,
- Generation of natural language texts from formal specifications,
- Semi-formal interfaces for interacting with databases,
- Hypertext facilities for database querying.


PROGRAM COMMITTEE

Chairman: Mokrane Bouzeghoub
PRiSM, University of Versailles, France

Alain Bonnet Langage Naturel, France
Janis Bubenko U. of Stockholm, Sweeden
Hans Burg Vrije U., The Netherlands
Corinne Cauvet U. of Paris I, France
Jose Coch Erli, France
Isabelle Comyn-Wattiau Essec, France
Roland Dachelet Inria, France
Christian Fluhr CEA, France
Vladimir Fomichov Moscow State U., Russia
Robert Goldstein U. of British Columbia, Canada
Jon Atle Gulla GMD Darmstadt, Germany
Henri Habrias U. of Nantes, France
Jean-Noel Meunier PRiSM, France
Elisabeth Metais U.of Paris VI, France
Reinder van de Riet Vrije U., The Netherlands
Arne Solvberg NTH Trondheim, Norway
Veda Storey Rochester U., Canada


ORGANIZING COMMITTEE

Chairwoman: Elisabeth Metais
PRiSM, University of Versailles, France
Email: Elisabeth.Metais@prism.uvsq.fr

Christiane Boucher PRiSM, France
Gilles Levreau PRiSM, France
Jean-Noel Meunier PRiSM, France
Reinder van de Riet Vrije U., The Netherlands
Corinne Sweeney AFCET, France


FIRST SPONSORS: AFCET , University of Versailles, ERLI, ESSEC.


INSTRUCTIONS TO AUTHORS:
To contribute, please submit 4 copies of an original paper which does not
exceed 5000 words, including a short abstract, to the program committee
chairman:
Prof. Mokrane Bouzeghoub,
Laboratoire PRiSM, Universite de Versailles
45, av des Etats-Unis 78000 Versailles, France.


IMPORTANTE DATES :
PAPER SUBMISSION DEADLINE: FEBRUARY 1st, 1995
Notification of acceptance : March 30th, 1995
Camera-ready paper : May 15th, 1995





Elisabeth METAIS
Laboratoire PRiSM
Universite de Versailles
45, avenue des Etats-Unis
78000 VERSAILLES, FRANCE

Tel: +33 (1) 39 25 40 53
Fax: +33 (1) 39 25 40 57

Email: Elisabeth.Metais@prism.uvsq.fr

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Tue, 29 Nov 1994 13:02:12 -0800
To: nl-kr@ai.sunnyside.com (comp.ai.nlang-know-rep),
From: schlimme@eecs.wsu.edu (Jeffrey C. Schlimmer)
Subject: CFP: ML-95 Machine Learning Tutorial Proposals, Jul 95, Tahoe

Please redistribute as appropriate. --Jeff Schlimmer

--------------------
TWELFTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MACHINE LEARNING (ML-95)
Tahoe City, California
July 9-12, 1995

CALL FOR TUTORIAL PROPOSALS

The ML-95 Program Committee invites proposals for the Tutorial Program
of the Twelfth International Conference on Machine Learning (ML-95).
Tutorials will be held 9 July 1995. Tutorial participants will have
the opportunity to learn the state of the art in a selected area.
Members of all segments of the ML community are encouraged to submit
tutorial proposals. Tutorial attendance will be open to all attendees
of the Machine Learning conference.

The format of the tutorials will be determined by the organizer(s).
Tutorials will typically be one full day in length, although half-day
proposals will be considered. Organizers are encouraged to prepare
written handouts of the tutorial for distribution at the venue.

PROPOSAL CONTENT

Proposals for tutorials should contain:

- A description of the tutorial.

- A brief discussion of why the tutorial is of particular interest at
this time.

- A resume of the tutorial organizer(s) (which should include previous
teaching/presentation experience)

- An indication of the length of the tutorial (half-day, or full-day).

- Audio-visual resources required for the tutorial

SUBMISSIONS

Tutorial proposals should be submitted as soon as possible but NO
LATER THAN 4 JANUARY 1994. Organizers will be notified of the
committee's decision by 15 January 1995. The tutorial organizers will
be responsible for producing a call for participation. The Call is due
15 February 1995. We will post the call in various newsgroups;
individual organizers are also encouraged to distribute the Call
themselves.

Please submit (preferably by email) your proposal and address
inquiries concerning tutorials to:

Sridhar Mahadevan
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
University of South Florida
4202 East Fowler Avenue, ENG 118
Tampa, Florida 33620-5399
mahadeva@csee.usf.edu
Phone: (813)974-3260
Fax: (813)974-5456

http://www.eecs.wsu.edu/~schlimme/ml95.html

Jeffrey C. Schlimmer, Asst. Prof., School of EE & CS, Washington State
University, Pullman, WA 99164-2752, (509) 335-2399, (509) 335-3818 FAX
http://www.eecs.wsu.edu/~schlimme/

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Wed, 30 Nov 94 16:55:39 EST
From: yarowsky@unagi.cis.upenn.edu (David Yarowsky)
To: nl-kr@cs.rochester.edu
Subject: CFP: ACL-95 Corpus Workshop, Jun 95, Cambridge



ACL's SIGDAT presents the

THIRD WORKSHOP ON VERY LARGE CORPORA

Preliminary Call for Papers


WHEN: June 30, 1995 - immediately following ACL-95 (June 27-29)
WHERE: MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA


WORKSHOP DESCRIPTION:

As in past years, the workshop will offer a general forum for new research in
corpus-based and statistical natural language processing. Areas of interest
include (but are not limited to): sense disambiguation, part-of-speech tagging,
robust parsing, term and name identification, alignment of parallel text,
machine translation, lexicography, spelling correction, morphological analysis
and anaphora resolution.

This year, the workshop will be organized around the theme of:

Supervised Training vs. Self-organizing Methods

Is annotation worth the effort? Historically, annotated corpora have
made a significant contribution. The tagged Brown Corpus, for example,
led to important improvements in part-of-speech tagging. But annotated
corpora are expensive. Very little annotated data is currently available,
especially for languages other than English. Self-organizing methods offer
the hope that annotated corpora might not be necessary. Do these methods
really work? Do we have to choose between annotated corpora and
unannotated corpora? Can we use both?

The workshop will encourage contributions of innovative research along this
spectrum. In particular, it will seek work in languages other than English
and in applications where appropriately tagged training corpora do not exist.
It will also explore what new kinds of corpus annotations (such as discourse
structure, co-reference and sense tagging) would be useful to the community,
and will encourage papers on their development and use in experimental
projects.

The theme will provide an organizing structure to the workshop, and
offer a focus for debate. However, we expect and will welcome a diverse
set of submissions in all areas of statistical and corpus-based NLP.


PROGRAM CHAIRS:

Ken Church - AT&T Bell Laboratories
David Yarowsky - University of Pennsylvania


SPONSOR: SIGDAT (ACL's special interest group for linguistic data
and corpus-based approaches to NLP)


FORMAT FOR SUBMISSION: Authors should submit a full-length paper
(3500-8000 words), either electronically or in hard-copy. Electronic
submissions must either be plain ascii text or a single latex file
following the ACL-95 stylesheet (no separate figures or .bib files).
Hard copy submissions should include four (4) copies of the paper.
Authors should consult the primary call for papers in late January for
updated specifications.


SCHEDULE:

Submission Deadline: March 10, 1995
Notification Date: April 10, 1995
Camera ready copy due: May 10, 1995

CONTACT:

Ken Church David Yarowsky
Room 2B-421 Dept. of Computer and Info. Science
AT&T Bell Laboratories University of Pennsylvania
600 Mountain Ave. 200 S. 33rd St.
Murray Hill, NJ 07974 USA Philadelphia, PA 19104-6389 USA
e-mail: kwc@research.att.com email: yarowsky@unagi.cis.upenn.edu

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Mon, 28 Nov 94 21:55 EST
From: lewis@research.att.com (David Lewis)
To: empiricists@CSLI.Stanford.EDU, nl-kr@ai.sunnyside.com
Subject: CFP: AAAI Fall Symp, 95, Active Learning, Nov 95, Cambridge


I'd like to encourage the participation of the computational
linguistics community in the workshop described below. Active learning
has a huge potential in language processing, given the large amounts
of raw text available and the high cost on judging/tagging/annotating
this text. In fact, in the guise of "relevance feedback" and ad hoc
data selection methods, active learning is already being used to
considerable effect in language processing. Please feel free to
contact me with questions. Also, apologies to those of you who receive
multiple copies of this notice.
--Dave Lewis, lewis@research.att.com

* * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Call for Participation
AAAI Fall Symposium on Active Learning
November 10 - 12, 1995

Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Cambridge, MA

SYMPOSIUM TOPIC

An active learning system is one that can influence the training data
it receives by actions or queries to its environment. Properly
selected, these actions can drastically reduce the amount of data and
computation required by a machine learner.

Active learning has been studied independently by researchers in
machine learning, neural networks, robotics, computational learning
theory, experiment design, information retrieval, and reinforcement
learning, among other areas. This symposium will bring researchers
together to clarify the foundations of active learning and point out
synergies to build on.

PARTICIPATION

The Symposium on Active Learning will be held as part of the AAAI Fall
Symposium Series, and will be limited to between forty and sixty
participants.

Potential participants should submit a short position paper (at most
two pages) discussing what they could contribute to a dialogue on
active learning and/or what they hope to learn by participating.
Suggested topics include:

Theory: What are the important results in the theory of active
learning and what are important open problems? How much guidance
does theory give to application?

Algorithms: What successful algorithms have been found for active
learning? How general are they? For what tasks are they appropriate?

Evaluation: How can accuracy, convergence, and other properties of
active learning algorithms be evaluated when, for instance,
data is not sampled randomly?

Taxonomy : What kinds of information are available to learners
(e.g. membership vs. equivalence queries, labeled vs. unlabeled data)
and what are the ways learning methods can use them? What are the
commonalities among methods studied by different fields?

Papers should be sent by APRIL 14, 1995 to:

David D. Lewis lewis@research.att.com
AT&T Bell Laboratories
600 Mountain Ave.; Room 2C-408
Murray Hill, NJ 07974-0636

Electronic mail submissions are strongly preferred.

In addition to invited participants, a limited number of other
interested parties will be able to register in each symposium on a
first-come, first-served basis. Registration will be available by
1 August, 1995. To obtain registration information write to the
AAAI at 445 Burgess Drive, Menlo Park, CA 94025 (fss@aaai.org).

SYMPOSIUM STRUCTURE

The symposium will be broken into sessions, each dedicated to a major
theme identified within the position papers. Sessions will begin with
a background presentation by an invited speaker, followed by brief
position statements from selected participants. A significant portion
of each session will be reserved for group discussion, guided by a
moderator and focused on the core issue for the session. The final
session of the symposium will accommodate new issues that are raised
during sessions.

RELEVANT DATES

April 14, 1995 Submissions for the symposia are due
May 19, 1995 Notification of acceptance
September 1, 1995 Working notes for symposium distributed
November 10-12, 1995 Symposium held at MIT

Organizing Committee:

David A. Cohn (co-chair), MIT, cohn@psyche.mit.edu; David D. Lewis
(co-chair), AT&T Bell Labs, lewis@research.att.com; Kathryn Chaloner,
U. Minnesota ; Leslie Pack Kaelbling, Brown U.; Robert Schapire, AT&T
Bell Labs; Sebastian Thrun, U. Bonn; Paul Utgoff, U. Mass Amherst.

Sponsored by the American Association for Artificial Intelligence
445 Burgess Drive
Menlo Park, CA 94025
(415) 328-3123
fss@aaai.org

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: ntbinh@netcom.com (binh nguyen/aureflam)
Subject: Position: Machine-translation English to Vietnamese, San Jose
Date: Thu, 1 Dec 1994 02:16:55 GMT

Research Associate Position

CT Translation is a small business venture that look to develop
machine-translation software from English to Vietnamese. We are looking for
an individual with education or research background in English language
structure to join our research team in applying a tentative approach to the
full development of the product. Creative mind and analytic ability to depart
from orthodox knowledge for this application is strongly preferred.

Job Description:
The responsibilities include:

* Developing a classification of parts of speech so as to be used in parsing
for syntax analysis.

* Building a database for syntax rules accordingly.

* Developing a classification system useful for semantic recognition.

* Applying this concept into building a dictionary database for machine
translation.

The research associate will work with the project leader in formularizing the
conceptual approach into a system of ready-to-use rules.

Qualification:

BA or MA in English/linguistics with strong emphasis on English grammatical
structure. A working knowlege of Vietnamese language is prefered.

Salary:

25K-28K with basic health insurance

Please send resume to CT Translation, 6840 Via Del Oro, Suite 285, San Jose, CA
95119 USA, fax (408) 281-3736 or email ntbinh@netcom.com.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: sushil@cs.unr.edu (Sushil Louis)
Subject: CFP: GWICS 4th Golden West Conf. on Intel. Sys., Jun 95, San Franciso
Date: Thu, 1 Dec 1994 22:15:45 GMT
To: uunet!comp-ai-nlang-know-rep@uunet.uu.net

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ----
THE INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY FOR COMPUTERS AND THEIR APPLICATIONS
Presents
THE FOURTH GOLDEN WEST INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS
CALL FOR PAPERS
Mon. - Wed., June 12, 13, and 14, 1995, San Francisco.

The Fourth Golden West International Conference on Intelligent Systems seeks
quality international submissions in all areas of intelligent systems
including, but not limited to:
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = ====
REASONING KNOWLEDGE-BASED SYSTEMS
LOGIC AND INFERENCE MACHINE LEARNING AND ADAPTIVE SYSTEMS
NON-MONOTONIC REASONING RECOGNITION AND CLASSIFICATION
VISION, IMAGE PROCESSING/INTERPRETATION FUZZY SYSTEMS
ARTIFICIAL NEURAL NETWORKS ROBOTICS, CONTROL, PLANNING
CASE-BASED REASONING MULTIMEDIA AND HUMAN COMPUTER INTERFACES
DISTRIBUTED INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS EVOLUTIONARY COMPUTATION(GA,GP,ES,EP)
CELLULAR AUTOMATA ARTIFICIAL LIFE
COGNITIVE SCIENCE AUTONOMOUS AGENTS
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ----
LOCATION & TRAVEL CONNECTIONS: The conference is being held in the Sir Francis
Drake Hotel near Nob Hill in downtown San Francisco. One of the world's most
exciting cities, San Francisco has many attractions including the Golden Gate
Bridge and Park, Nob Hill, Chinatown, and nearby Silicon Valley. The second
week in June usually has warm days and cool nights (bring warm jackets). San
Francisco can be reached by airline from anywhere in the world.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = ====
GUIDELINES
* Authors must submit 5 copies of an extended abstract (at least 4 pages) or
complete paper (no more than 10 double spaced pages). Please include one
separate cover page containing title, author's name(s), affiliation, EMAIL
ADDRESS, telephone number, and TOPIC AREA. To help us assign reviewers to
papers use the topics in the list above as a guide. In cases of multiple
authors all correspondence will be sent to the first author unless otherwise
requested. Send submissions to Sushil J. Louis, Dept. of Computer Science/171,
University of Nevada, Reno, NV 89557.

* Papers/abstracts must be received by February 15, 1995.
------------------
* Notice of acceptance will be mailed by April 10, 1995, after refereeing.
Information on formatting, and hotel reservations etc., will also be included.
All accepted papers will appear in the conference proceedings and MUST be
presented at the conference by an author.

* We will solicit expanded versions of selected papers for review toward
possible Journal publication.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ----
For information on submissions, the conference program, and other technical
matters contact: Sushil J. Louis, Email:gwics95@cs.unr.edu, Tel:(702)784-4315,
Fax:(702)784-1766
A postscript version of this call for papers is available for anonymous ftp
from mammoth.cs.unr.edu in /sushil/gwics.ps

For information on local arrangements contact: Mary Ann Sullivan,
Email:sullivan@unity.ncsu.edu, Tel: (919) 847-3747.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ----
Conference chair: Carl Looney (Univ. of Nevada, Reno)
Program chair: Sushil J. Louis (Univ. of Nevada, Reno)

PROGRAM COMMITTEE
R. Ammar (Univ. of Connecticut) G. Antoniou (Univ. of Newcastle)
M. Boden (Univ. of Skovde) B. Buckles (Tulane Univ.)
A. Canas (Univ. of West Florida) H. Chen (Univ. of Alabama)
M. Cohen (Cal. State, Fresno) D. Egbert (Univ. of Nevada, Reno)
S. Fadali (Univ. of Nevada, Reno) J. Fisher (Pomona)
K. Ford (Univ. of West Florida) P. Geril (Univ. of Ghent)
J. Gero (Univ. of Sydney) A. Goel (Georgia Tech)
F. Harris (Univ. of Nevada, Reno) D. Hudson (Cal. State, Fresno)
P. Jog (DePaul Univ.) S. Kawata (Tokyo Metropolitan Univ.)
V. Kumar (CSIRO) D. Leake (Indiana Univ., Bloomington)
A. Lehmann (Univ. of Muenchen) R. Loganantharaj (Univ. of SW Louisiana)
M. Maher (Univ. of Sydney) J. McDonnel (NRaD, San Diego)
T. Oren (Univ. of Ottawa) V. Patel (McGill Univ.)
F. Petry (Tulane Univ.) D. Pheanis (Arizona State)
V. Piuri (Politecnico Di Milano) G. Rawlins (Indiana Univ., Bloomington)
R. Reynolds (Wayne State Univ.) M. Rosenman (Univ. of Sydney)
F. Samadzadeh (OSSM, Oklahoma City) A. Sangster (Univ. of Aberdeen)
R. Smith (Univ. of Alabama) R. Srikanth (Clark Atlanta Univ.)
M. Sugisaka (Oita Univ.) R. Sun (Univ. of Alabama)
M. Woodfill (Arizona State) A. Yfantis (UNLV)
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

End of NL-KR Digest
*******************

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