Call for Papers: the deadline for LFG25 has been extended to *19 February*.
Join us for 30 years of LFG, with invited speakers Joan Bresnan and
Stefan Müller, and an interesting workshop on "Arguments and Challenges
for lexicalism"!
The updated call for papers is below:
LFG25: The 30th International Lexical-Functional
Grammar Conference
22 July - 24 July 2025
Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain
Abstract submission deadline: 19 February 2025, 23:59 UTC-12 (midnight
anywhere on Earth)
Abstract submission link:
https://openreview.net/group?id=LFG/2025/Conference
(Please make sure to create an account early on)
Conference website:
https://eventum.upf.edu/128654/detail/lfg25-the-30th-international-lexical-…
Conference e-mail (NOT for abstract submission): LFG25 'at' upf.edu
Invited speakers: Joan Bresnan (Stanford University) and Stefan Müller
(Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)
Core conference: 22-24 July 2025
Pre-conference activities: 21 July 2025
Workshop: 25 July 2025
Associated Workshop: "Arguments and Challenges for lexicalism",
organized by Alex Alsina, Ash Asudeh,
and Daniel Siddiqi
Conference mode: In person. Online participation will be possible in
exceptional circumstances.
LFG25 welcomes work within the formal architecture of Lexical-Functional
Grammar as well as
typological, formal, and computational work within the 'spirit of LFG'
as a lexicalist approach to
language employing a parallel, constraint-based framework. The
conference aims to promote
interaction and collaboration among researchers interested in
non-derivational approaches to
grammar, where grammar is seen as the interaction of (perhaps violable)
constraints from multiple
levels of structuring, including those of syntactic categories,
grammatical relations, semantics and
discourse.
SUBMISSIONS: TALKS AND POSTERS
The main conference sessions will involve 45-minute talks (30 min + 15
min discussion), and poster
presentations. Contributions can focus on results from completed as well
as ongoing research, with
an emphasis on novel approaches, methods, ideas, and perspectives,
whether descriptive, theoretical,
formal or computational. Presentations should describe original,
unpublished work.
DISSERTATION SESSION
As in previous years, we are hoping to hold a special session that will
give students the chance to
present recent PhD dissertations (or other student research
dissertations). The dissertations must
be completed by the time of the conference, and they should be made
publicly accessible (e.g., on
the World Wide Web). The talks in this session should provide an
overview of the main original
points of the dissertation; the talks will be 20 minutes, followed by a
10-minute discussion period.
Students should note that the main sessions are certainly also open to
student submissions. Students
who present papers in either session will receive a small subvention
towards their conference costs
from the International LFG Association (ILFGA).
TIMETABLE FOR SUBMISSIONS
Deadline for abstracts: 15 February 2025, 23:59 UTC-12 (midnight
anywhere on Earth)
Notification of acceptance: 31 March 2025
Conference: 22 July - 24 July 2025
SUBMISSION SPECIFICATIONS
The language of the conference is English, and all abstracts must be
written in English.
All abstracts should be submitted using the online submission system.
Submissions should be in the
form of abstracts only. Abstracts can be up to three A4 pages, including
figures and
references. Abstracts should be in 11pt or larger type, with margins of
at least 2cm on all four
sides, and should include a title. Omit name and affiliation (including
in PDF document properties),
and avoid obvious self-reference.
For dissertation session submissions, please add "Dissertation" to the
title of your abstract.
Please submit your abstract in .pdf format (or a plain text file).
The number of submissions is not restricted. However, in the interests
of high participation and
broad representation, each author should be involved in a maximum of two
oral papers and can only be
a single author of one. There are no restrictions on poster
presentations. Authors may want to keep
this in mind when stating their preferences concerning the mode of
presentation of their
submissions.
All abstracts will be reviewed anonymously by at least three referees.
Papers accepted to the
conference can be submitted to the refereed proceedings, and will be
published, subject to
acceptance, online by PubliKon at the University of Konstanz. (Please
note that papers submitted
to the proceedings are no longer automatically accepted for publication
in the proceedings.) See
http://web.stanford.edu/group/cslipublications/cslipublications/LFG/ for
recent proceedings.
PRE-CONFERENCE ACTIVITIES
There will be a day of pre-conference activities on 21 July.
ORGANISERS AND THEIR CONTACT ADDRESSES
If you have queries about abstract submission or have problems
submitting your paper, please contact
the Program Committee.
Program Chairs (Email: lfg.progcom 'at' gmail.com)
Tina Bögel, University of Konstanz and Goethe University Frankfurt
Stephen Jones, University of Groningen
Local conference organizers (Email: LFG25 'at' upf.edu)
Alex Alsina, Universitat Pompeu Fabra
FURTHER INFORMATION
Further information about LFG as a framework for linguistic analysis is
available at the following
site: https://ling.sprachwiss.uni-konstanz.de/pages/home/lfg/
Dear colleagues,
Our next LFG f-structure workshop will be held online on *Thursday 27 Feb*
*2025 *from 5:00 pm to 7:00 pm (UTC+0).
The meeting will consist of two parts. In the first half, we will discuss
any issues of linguistic analysis and/or technical XLE issues in relation
to computational grammars under development by participants. If you are
developing an XLE grammar and are having any issues with XLE or your
grammar, you can discuss these issues in the first half of the meeting. In
the second half, depending on how much time is remaining, we will continue
the comparison of f-structures for translational equivalents of the
following sentences:
28. The woman bought the tractor for her husband.
29. The lovers danced until dawn.
30. The boy bathed in the river.
The f-structures for the English versions of these sentences are available
on the INESS page (see below) and in the Google Drive folder for this
meeting series; please get in touch with one of us for access to this
folder. Even if your grammar cannot analyse the translational equivalents
of these sentences, you are welcome to attend the first half of the meeting
and receive comments on your computational grammar and the structures that
it produces, and you are also welcome to attend the second half to
participate in discussion of these sentences for those grammars which can
analyse them.
Best,
Mary, Lawrence, Elaine
*Zoom Meeting*
Join Zoom Meeting
https://tcd-ie.zoom.us/j/92690283651?pwd=VXdOWjczaWtUYXM3cklvZC8rVlFuZz09
Meeting ID: 926 9028 3651
Passcode: 801772
>From Beginners to Experts, all are Welcome!
We look forward to seeing you online soon.
- Mary Dalrymple, Lawrence (Chit-Fung) Lam, and Elaine Ui Dhonnchadha
Please refer to the message below for further details about the f-structure
comparison meetings. Thank you!
---------------------------------------
As we announced in an earlier message, Chit-Fung Lam (Lawrence), Elaine Ui
Dhonnchadha, and Mary Dalrymple have revived the f-structure comparison
sessions that were held in the regular meetings of the ParGram consortium (
https://pargram.w.uib.no/). These meetings are held on-line, and anyone
who is developing a grammar using the XLE grammar development platform (
https://ling.sprachwiss.uni-konstanz.de/pages/xle/) is welcome to attend.
We would also welcome participation by anyone using the Grammar Writer's
Workbench (
https://parc-public.pages-external.parc.com/xle/isl/groups/nltt/medley/).
The first half of these meetings will consist of discussion of general
issues in grammar development and specific issues in the grammars and
analyses that participants are working on. Please bring your questions and
issues with your grammar and the XLE to this part of the meeting. In the
second half of these meetings, we will discuss and compare f-structures for
a parallel set of translationally equivalent sentences, using the Pargram
treebank sentences as a starting point. The Pargram treebank is available
at the following link (scroll to the end of the page):
https://clarino.uib.no/iness/treebanks?collection=ParGram&reset-all=true
We will discuss the f-structures for the current sentences (we may not have
time for a discussion of all of them). You are welcome to attend the
second half of the meeting even if your grammar does not parse the
translational equivalent of these sentences.
In preparation for the discussion in the second half of the meeting,
participants will translate these sentences into the language they are
working on, and produce and print out the f-structures to PDF. There is no
need to print out c-structures. We have created a Google Drive directory
for the f-structures, which currently contains f-structures for English,
Irish, Mandarin, Norwegian, Polish and Welsh. In advance of the meeting,
meeting participants should plan to deposit their f-structures there for as
many of the sentences as you can parse. Please contact one of us if you
would like to have access to this repository.
If you have any questions, or if you would like to be added to the list of
people with access to the f-structure repository, please send email to one
of us. We are looking forward to discussing your f-structures!
- Mary Dalrymple, Lawrence (Chit-Fung) Lam, and Elaine Ui Dhonnchadha