Schlagwörter:
Lexical Functional Grammar (LFG), Glue semantics, Theoretical semantics, Semantics with LLMs, Discourse, SUMO, Natural Reasoning, Applicatives, Light verbs, AI cooperation, Multi-modal search
Synopsis
This Festschrift in honour of Richard (Dick) Crouch contains 14 articles which reflect the variety of Dick’s interests and contributions to theoretical linguistics and natural language processing. Throughout his career, Dick has had a constant interest in the interaction between language and reasoning preferring insights embodied in implementations to mere speculations. The papers in this volume range across topics such as: constraints to be put on computational systems so they generate and analyze only possible human languages; proposals to analyze discourse; linking language to theorem provers; accounts of lexical constructions in theoretical semantics and by LLMs; applications in biomedical research and multi-modal search.
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Autor/innen-Biografien
Annie Zaenen, Stanford University, University of Konstanz
After obtaining her Ph.D. in linguistics at Harvard in 1980, Annie Zaenen worked on Scandinavian syntax and general linguistic theory in LFG (Lexical Functional Grammar), especially on long-distance dependencies and functional uncertainty. She contributed to the development of two level morphologies at Xerox PARC and managed the linguistic area of the Xerox European Research Center in France in the 1990s. She retired from PARC in 2011 and is now an adjunct professor at Stanford and a doctor honors causa of Universität Konstanz.
Stephen Pulman, Oxford University
Stephen Pulman was a co-founder of TheySay Ltd, a sentiment analysis company which was spun out of the Department of Computer Science in 2010, and acquired by Aptean in 2017. After retirement from Oxford University in 2017, he became an Emeritus Professorial Fellow of Somerville College, Oxford, and Emeritus Professor of the Department of Computer Science. He also took up a position as Senior Natural Language Research Scientist for Apple.
Aikaterini-Lida Kalouli, Bundesdruckerei GmbH
Aikaterini-Lida Kalouli is currently a Data Scientist and NLP Specialist at the Bundesdruckerei GmbH, Germany. Previously, she worked as an Assistant Professor - PostDoc Researcher at the Center for Information and Speech Processing (CIS) of the Ludwig-Maximilians University of Munich. Before that, Aikaterini acquired her Ph.D. at the University of Konstanz. Her main research interests lie in natural language inference, semantic parsing and the limitations of Large Language Models.
Tracy Holloway King, Adobe Inc.
Tracy Holloway King is a senior principal scientist in Adobe Inc.’s Search and Discovery team. She has held applied science roles at Adobe, Amazon, Microsoft, and eBay. She began her career in Xerox PARC’s Natural Language Theory and Technology group after earning her Ph.D. in linguistics from Stanford University
Veröffentlicht
November 6, 2025
Copyright (c) 2025 Annie Zaenen (Sammelbandherausgeber/in); Pranshu Gupta, Miriam Butt, Alexis Cooper, Felix Zheng, Susan W. Brown, Martha Palmer, David Milward, Livia Polanyi, Marisa Ferrara Boston, Mark-Matthias Zymla, Martin H. van den Berg, Erisa Bytyqi, Annette Hautli-Janisz (Autor/in); Stephen Pulman, Aikaterini-Lida Kalouli, Tracy Holloway King (Sammelbandherausgeber/in); Ash Asudeh, Avery Andrews, Alexandros Tantos, Kosmas Kosmidis, Adam Pease, Robin Cooper, Cleo Condoravi, Paul Kiparsky, Ronald M. Kaplan (Autor/in)