Logic List Mailing Archive

Concept Types and Frames in Languages, Cognition and Science

24-26 August 2009
Duesseldorf, Germany

Concept Types and Frames in Language, Cognition, and Science

International Conference Duesseldorf (GER), August 24-26, 2009

Organization: Research Unit Functional Concepts and Frames

Homepage: 
http://www.phil-fak.uni-duesseldorf.de/fff/fff-conference-ctf09/first-annou
ncement/

Deadline for submission of abstracts (max. 1000 words respectively 2 pages
 
including figures): March 15th 2009; further details will be available at
 
the conference homepage in due course.

AIMS AND SCOPE:The topic of the conference is the investigation of concept
 
types of nouns and verbs and their respective relationships to frames. 
Frames provide a recursive device for representing knowledge about 
arbitrary objects and categories by means of attributes and their values.
 
They offer a flexible way of representing concepts of different types in 
language, philosophy and sciences at different levels of detail and at 
different stages of development or processing. The interdisciplinary 
conference combines approaches from linguistics, computational 
linguistics, mathematics, cognitive psychology, neuroscience, philosophy,
 
philosophy of science, and the history of science.

INVITED SPEAKERS:Barbara Abbott, Lawrence W. Barsalou, Jerry Hobbs, Beth 
Levin, James Pustejovsky, Barry Smith, Paul Thagard

The conference will be held in English.

LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVES:Nouns in natural language correspond to different
 
basic types of concepts. Sortal nouns (e.g. //cow, table, adjective//) 
constitute the unmarked type of nouns; individual nouns (e.g. //Mary, 
pope, moon//) and functional nouns (e.g. //mother, head, size//) are 
marked in being inherently unique; relational nouns (e.g. //son, leg, 
modifier//) and functional nouns are marked by involving one or more 
additional arguments. The linguistic perspective on noun types includes 
determination in general and productive type shifts, as both permit 
systematic transitions between types of nouns. The types of nouns can be 
modelled by frames of different types. A second focus is on verbs: 
dimensional verbs such as //cost//, //last//, //widen//, and //cool// can
 
incorporate functional concepts as well. Moreover, verbs also lend 
themselves naturally to a frame account of lexical meaning. A systematic 
frame analysis of verb and noun meanings promises a substantial 
contribution to theories of both syntactic and semantic composition. Among
 
the different concept types, functional concepts are of particular 
interest since they directly correspond to attributes in frames. 
Therefore, they play a central role not only in linguistics but in 
conceptual and theoretical evolution in general.

PHILOSOPHICAL AND COGNITIVE PERSPECTIVES:Frames, in Barsalou's sense, are
 
recursive attribute-value structures. While frames can be used to 
implement individual and sortal concepts, their attributes can themselves
 
be analysed as recursively interrelated functional concepts. Given that 
frames are the basic format of concept formation in cognition, attributes
 
and frames might have neural correlates in our brains. Frames are a 
natural linguistic and conceptual format for the representation of complex
 
ontologies that embody substance-accidence and part-whole relations. Of 
particular interest is the relation of frames to complex representational
 
formats such as conceptual spaces and mental models. Functional concepts 
and frames play a crucial role in the human evolution of a stable 
cognitive framework for communication and cooperation, in everyday life, 
as well as in science. Insofar as the objects of scientific disciplines 
are defined in terms of underlying frames, Kuhnian paradigm shifts are 
related to changes in the frames employed in science.The conference 
invites contributions to the following topics:* Types of nouns and types 
of determination - typological characteristics of non-sortal noun types -
 
compositional properties of non-sortal noun types - typological accounts 
of determination, in particular definiteness and possession - historical 
development of functional and relational nouns and their grammatical 
integration - automatic classification of noun types in natural language 
corpora* The vocabulary of dimensions: semantics, typology, and evolution
 
- abstract functional nouns (price, temperature, meaning)  - dimensional 
adjectives - stative dimensional verbs (cost, weigh, mean)  - dynamic 
dimensional verbs, in particular degree achievements* Lexical 
decomposition using frames - frames for types of nouns - frames for types
 
of verbs - large frame systems in the lexicon* Frames approaches to word 
formation - frame analysis of compounds - frame analysis of deverbal 
nouns* Frames in cognition - functional and relational frames in cognition
 
- neural correlates and computational modelling of functional concepts and
 
frames* Frames in science and philosophy - functional concepts and frames
 
in scientific theory and practice from a historical perspective, in 
particular in the history of medical science - functional and relational 
concepts and frames in philosophical terminology, ontology, and 
metaphysics - the relation of paradigm shifts to changes in scientific 
frames - the structure of scientific ontologies, especially in medicine, 
biology, and metaphysics* Frame theory - formalization and computational 
modelling of functional andrelational concepts and frames - algebraic 
properties of frame spaces and spaces of attributes - value spaces of 
attributes

IMPORTANT DATES:- Conference: 24-26 August- Submission:  15 March- 
Notification: 30 May

GENERAL CHAIR:Sebastian Lbner

SCIENTIFIC BOARD:Heiner Fangerau, Hans Geisler, Jim Kilbury, Gerhard 
Schurz, Robert D. Van Valin, Jr., Markus Werning

LOCAL ORGANIZERS:Thomas Gamerschlag, Doris Gerland, Rainer Osswald, Wiebke
 
Petersen