SIGSEM (Patrick Blackburn) ========================== ----------------------------------------------------------------- Annual Report on SIGSEM, 26 October 2000 Patrick Blackburn and Harry Bunt ----------------------------------------------------------------- The past year has been dominated by two activities. First, sponsoring workshops. Second, getting the SIGSEM website up and running, and holding a membership drive. ICoS-2, the Second Workshop on Inference in Computational Semantics was held at Schloss Dagstuhl, Germany, on July 29--30, 2000. The invited speakers were: James Allen: Towards Practical Dialogue Systems. Christof Monz: Computational Semantics in Information Retrieval Bonnie Webber: Computing Anaphora There were thirteen invited talks, and six system demonstrations. In addition, there was a fruitful discussion of the role of SIGSEM and the future of the ICoS workshop. ICoS is a small event, but a lively one that attracts some bright young researchers. There was a general feeling that it was important to retain the genuine workshop atmosphere it has, and to increase the emphasis on implementations. The proceedings of ICoS-2 will be appearing as a special issue of the Journal of Language and Computation. Plans are now underway for ICoS-3. If all goes according to plan, this will be held as a satellite workshop of IJCAR in June 2001 in Siena, Italy. IJCAR, the International Joint Conference on Automated Reasoning, is a one-off event made up of the three main automated reasoning conferences (CADE, FTP, and TABLEAUX). Holding ICoS-3 as a satellite workshop should encourage further links between the automated reasoning and NLP communities. As well as invited and contributed talks, we are planning to offer a tutorial on automated reasoning for computational linguists, and a tutorial on computational semantics for members of the automated reasoning community. SIGSEM is also a sponsor of IWCS-4, the Fourth International Workshop on Computational Semantics, which will be held in Tilburg, the Netherlands, from January 10--12, 2001. A preliminary version of the SIGSEM webpage has been made public (and there is now a link to it from the ACL homepage): see www.sigsem.org It is now possible to sign up as a SIGSEM member online, and the list of members is maintained publicly. Response to the site has exceeded expectations. It was anticipated that membership would plateau at about 90. In fact, in the first two weeks since the site was made public we have signed up 110 members. We will be continuing our membership drive in the coming weeks. It now seems plausible that we will attract over 150 members by the end of the year. As encouraging as the numbers is the quality of the membership we are attracting. Once the membership drive is over, it is hoped to further develop the website. Among other things, we hope to develop serious coverage of projects in computational semantics, educational tools and courses in computational semantics, and inference tools.