Logic List Mailing Archive

NASSLLI 2014: North American Summer School in Logic, Language and Information

23-27 Jun 2014
College Park MD, U.S.A.

NASSLLI 2014
North American Summer School in Logic, Language and Information
2014http://nasslli2014.com/
June 23-27 2014, University of Maryland, College Park

1st CALL for COURSE and WORKSHOP PROPOSALS

The sixth NASSLLI (after previous editions at UT Austin, Stanford
University, Indiana University and UCLA) will be hosted at the
University of Maryland, College Park, June 23-27 2014.
The summer school, aimed at graduate students and advanced
undergraduates in a wide variety of fields, is loosely modeled on the
long-running ESSLLI series in Europe. It will consist of a number of
courses and workshops, selected on the basis of proposals. By default,
courses and workshops meet for 90 minutes on each of five days.

Proposals are invited for courses or workshops that present
interdisciplinary work between the areas of logic, linguistics,
computer science, cognitive science, philosophy and artificial
intelligence, though work in just one area is within the scope of the
summer school if it can be applied in other fields. Examples of
possible topics would include e.g. logics for communication,
computational semantics, modal logics, game theory and decision
theory, dynamic semantics,  machine learning, Bayesian cognitive
modeling, probabilistic models of language and communication, and
automated theorem proving. We encourage potential course or workshop
contributors to check out previous programs at:

* http://nasslli2012.com/
* http://www.linguistics.ucla.edu/nasslli04/program.html
* http://www.stanford.edu/group/nasslli/
* http://www.indiana.edu/~nasslli/2003/program.html
* http://www.indiana.edu/~nasslli/

Courses and workshops should aim to be accessible to an
interdisciplinary, graduate level audience. Courses may certainly
focus on a single area, but lecturers should then include introductory
background, try to avoid specialized notation that cannot be applied
more widely, and spend time on the question of how the topic is
relevant to other fields. A workshop can be more accessible if its
program is bracketed by broader-audience talks that introduce and
summarize the week's presentations.

Associated Workshops/Conferences: In addition to courses and workshops
taking place during the main NASSLLI five day session, NASSLLI
welcomes proposals for 1-3 day workshops or conferences hosted on
campus immediately before or after the summer school, thus on the
weekends of June 15-17 and June 23-25 2012. Previous such associated
meetings have included the Dynamic Epistemic Logic Workshop, the
Mathematics of Language conference, and the Theoretical Aspects of
Reasoning About Knowledge (TARK) conference.

Submission Details:

Submissions should be submitted using EasyChair
(https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=nasslli2014), and should indicate

1) person(s) in charge of the course/workshop and affiliation(s)
2) type of event (one week course or workshop, 90 min a day)
3) course/workshop title
4) an outline of the course/workshop up to 500 words
5) Special equipment (if any) needed to teach the course (beamer, computer ...)
6) a statement about the instructor's experience in teaching in
interdisciplinary settings
7) expected costs (whether you want to be paid hotel and/or travel,
and descriptions of funding in hand or for which you will apply)

Financial Details:

A course may be taught by one or two persons. Conference fees are
waived for all instructors. However, we can only guarantee paid
accommodation for one instructor per course. Where need arises, we
hope to be able to reimburse instructors for reasonable travel
expenses. However, we encourage all lecturers to fund their own travel
if this is feasible, since this will allow us to use our available
funding for student scholarships. We must also stress that while
proposals from all over the world are welcomed, the Summer School can
in general expect only to reimburse travel costs for travel from
destinations within North America to Maryland, although exceptions can
be made depending on the financial situation.

Workshops are more complicated financially than courses, and a
proposal for a workshop should include a plan to obtain some outside
funding for the speakers.

Schedule:September 1 2013 - Review of course proposals will begin; we
will continue to accept proposals until the schedule is filled;October
1 2013 - Course/workshop proposers notified of p.c. decisions;May 15,
2014 - Material for courses available for printing;

Local Organizers and Program Committee:
The local organizer for NASSLI 2014 is Eric Pacuit. The Program
Committee is co-chaired by Thomas Icard (Stanford) and Mandy Simons
(CMU). The full committee will be announced soon on the NASSLI 2014
website.

Contact Information:
For questions relating to proposals and proposal submission, send
email to pc@nasslli2014.com.
For questions relating to local organization, send email to oc@nasslli2014.com.


Standing NASSLLI Steering Committee:
David Beaver,  University of Texas, Austin
Phokion Kolaitis,  UC Santa Cruz and IBM Almaden Research Center
Lawrence S. Moss,  Indiana University
Valeria de Paiva , Rearden Commerce, Inc.
Stuart Shieber,  Harvard University
Moshe Vardi,  Rice University