Evening Lectures

All evening lectures are held in the Aula Magna D0.01, start at 19:00, and last around 60 minutes.
  • Tuesday, August 16, 2016: Larry Moss, Indiana University (United States of America), EMCL visiting scholar at the Free University of Bozen-Bolzano. Chair: Enrico Franconi.
  • Thursday, August 18, 2016: Marco Baroni, University of Trento (Italy). Chair: Raffaella Bernardi.
  • Tuesday, August 23, 2016: Verónica Becher, University of Buenos Aires and CONICET (Argentina), EMCL visiting scholar at the Free University of Bozen-Bolzano. Chair: Philippe Schnoebelen.
  • Thursday, August 25, 2016: Louise McNally, Universitat Pompeu Fabra (Spain). Chair: Gemma Boleda.

Titles and Abstracts

Larry Moss, Indiana University

Natural Logic

Tuesday, August 16, 19:00


Abstract: Much of modern logic originates in work on the foundations of mathematics. My talk reports on work in logic that has a different goal, the study of inference in language. This study leads to what I will call “natural logic”, the enterprise of studying logical inference in languages that look more like natural language than standard logical systems. I will sketch the history of this field, and I also will try to make as many connections as possible to courses at this year’s ESSLLI and to previous schools. I also will discuss computer implementations of natural logic.

 

Marco Baroni, University of Trento

Will computers ever be able to chat with us?

Thursday, August 18, 19:00


Abstract: The last few years of research in Artificial Intelligence have seen the incredible success of so-called end-to-end systems, that can learn to perform difficult tasks just by being exposed to examples of the relevant raw input data and the corresponding output. In computer vision, such systems can now distinguish pictures of Norfolk terriers from those of Yorkshire terriers and thousands of other categories. In Game AI, they were recently able to beat one of the top human Go players. Even within the realm of language, end-to-end systems can tackle challenging tasks such as machine translation with performance comparable to that of heavily engineered, manually assembled pipeline systems. And, yet, these last-generation end-to-end systems are still utterly failing at the task of having meaningful conversations with us. But failing the conversation challenge, I would argue, means failing at language in general, because language, by its very nature, is an interactive tool. Children do not learn to speak (just) by sitting in front of a TV screen; and direct or device-mediated conversation is the most common way in which grown-ups use language in everyday life. Moreover, a short conversational exchange is the fastest way, for children as well as for grown-ups, to acquire new words or new skills: for example, when we request and are provided explicit instructions about how to accomplish a task. In my lecture, I will present some conjectures on why linguistic interaction is so much harder than the interaction taking place in a match of Go, and I will suggest some research directions we should pursue in the next few years if we want to finally enable computers to chat with us.

 

Verónica Becher, Universidad de Buenos Aires & CONICET

Randomness!

Tuesday, August 23, 19:00


Abstract: Would you believe that these three sequences were obtained by tossing a fair coin, writing 0 for heads and 1 for tails?
111111111111111111111111111111111111111111…
01001000100001000001000000100000001000000001..
100101010110001101110100010010101111001001..
Everyone has an intuitive idea about what is randomness, often associated with the “gambling” or “luck”. We say “Lady luck is fickle“ because it is impossible to predict, it is lawless, it lacks patterns. Thus, heads and tails should occur with the same frequency in the limit, and the same should hold for combinations of heads and tails; otherwise we could guess right more than we could fail.

In this lecture I will explain and give formal answers to the following questions.

What is the definition of randomness?

A random sequence is indistiguishable from independent tosses of a fair coin. There was no satisfactory definition until the mid 1960s. Per Martin-Löf gave one (1966), Gregory Chaitin gave another (1975), both were based on the notion of algorithm. The fact that they were shown to be equivalent was decisive to consider it the right definition of randomness.

Can a computer output a purely random sequence?

The famous quote “Anyone who considers arithmetical methods of producing random digits is, of course, in a state of sin”, John von Neumann 1951, gives us the answer: No.

Are there degrees of randomness?

Randomness implies lack of regularities, lack of patterns. Pure randomness is defined as incompressibility by a Turing machine. But it is possible to consider different kinds of machines, as finite automata, pushdown automata, plain Turing machines or Turing machines with oracles. Different compression abilities yield different degrees of randomness.

What is the most elementary form of randomness?

It was defined by Emile Borel in 1909, he called it normality, and it just requires equifrequency of all blocks of digits of the same length. Normal sequences are those that are incompressible by finite automata. (My work is devoted to the construction of normal sequences with selected mathematical properties.)

What is the relation between randomness and Language?

A purely random sequence is one that, essentially, can only be described explicitly. This is formalised by Kolmogorov/Chatin’s complexity.

What is the relation between randomness and Logic?

The relation is based on the paradox “The first non interesting positive integer”, which is a rather interesting number, isn’t it? This paradox manifests that the majority of numbers are non interesting or random, although it can never be proved in particular cases. Randomness yields an incompleteness result for arithmetic in First Order Logic, analog to Gödel’s Incompleteness theorem (based on the liar’s paradox).

What is the relation between randomness and Information?

Chaitin’s complexity is formally identical to Shannon’s information theory. Randomness is equivalent to maximal information content.

 

Louise McNally, Universitat Pompeu Fabra

Meaning at a crossroads

Thursday, August 25, 19:00


Abstract: The lexical semantics of content words has historically generated comparatively little interest among formal semanticists, except when a class of content words proves to be sensitive to some sort of logical or grammatical phenomenon. There are some obvious reasons for this: the tools of formal semantics are poorly suited to dealing with the messy details of the lexicon, and many of these details — specifically, those not relevant for logical inference or grammatical phenomena — are not considered part of what a semantic theory should have to account for. Moreover, natural language has provided plenty of problems for semanticists to work on (indeed, with great success), even without getting into the lexicon.

In this talk, I reflect on the some of the negative effects of this situation and on my experience when I turned to distributional models, a completely different set of tools from those in which I was trained and with which I have worked for many years, in an effort to better address the interaction of lexical and compositional semantics. In part, the talk will serve as a methodological lesson in how easy it is to forget the adage that, when one only has a hammer, everything looks like a nail. In part, it will provide me with an opportunity to point to some largely ignored paths that I think researchers concerned with natural language meaning should explore.


Bolzano

Bolzano (Italian) or Bozen (German), (Ladin: Balsan, Bulsan) is the capital city of South Tyrol, the German-speaking region in the northern part of Italy. Bolzano is the largest city in the region. Its archaeology museum is famous worldwide as the home of the alpine iceman “Ötzi”. It is also known as the Italian Capital of Christmas thanks to its characteristic Christmas market. Bolzano’s population is around 100,000 (140,000 including the metropolitan area). 25% of inhabitants speak German as their mother tongue; the population of German-speakers is much higher in the non-urban parts of the province (up to more than 90% in some areas), making the city and province officially bilingual.

Together with Innsbruck, Bolzano is officially the capital of the Alps because the seat of the Alpine Convention is there. The world-famous Museum of Archaeology with the Iceman and the Messner Mountain Museum’s main seat make Bolzano a world city of mountaineering history and culture.


Registration

Registration desk

  • Saturday, August 13: 13:00 – 20:00 in D1.03 (first floor)
  • Sunday, August 14: 8:00 – 20:00 in D1.03 (first floor)
  • Saturday, August 20: 8:00 – 18:00 in D0.02 (ground floor)
  • Sunday, August 21: 14:00 – 18:00 in D0.02 (ground floor)
  • Monday – Friday: 8:00 – 18:30 in D0.02 (ground floor)

Registrations are closed.

Early-bird
(till May 31)
Regular
(till July 31)
Students350 €450 €
Academics (including members of Research Centers) 450 €550 €
Non-academics850 €950 €
Formal Grammar 2016 for Students30 €
Formal Grammar 2016 for Non-students80 €

Registration fees include lunches for week 1 in the university canteen.

Accommodation with registration

It is possible to reserve and pay for accommodation on the registration page (see below). For information about accommodation, please check out our Accommodations page.

Note, ESSLLI participants who attend the Composes or FG Satellite Events should register to these Events from the ESSLLI registration page. They can reserve and pay for their accommodation, including the extra nights necessary to attend the Satellite Event, via the ESSLLI form. If they do not attend ESSLLI and would like to receive help with booking the accommodation, they should contact the Satellite Event organizer.

Fee waiver applicants will be assigned automatically the most convenient accommodation among those at disposal. The information on which accommodation has been booked for them will be communicated by early June, after the fee waiver winners have been notified.

How to register

Lecturers, evening lecturers, workshop organizers will be contacted by the OC. They do not have to register via the form below.

Registrations and booking of accommodations are closed.

If you are from an Italian Institution and you need a Fatturazione Elettronica, you will be required to include the CUU, PEC, and fiscal data of your Institution to complete the registration.

We will send letters for Visa request only after a careful analysis of the participant’s situation and after having double checked with the relevant institutions the information entered via the registration form. We might also contact the applicant for further information.

Student Grants

The ESSLLI Organizing Committee is pleased to be able to offer a limited number of

  • participation fee waivers,
  • student accommodation grants (which include participation fee waiver), and
  • student accommodation and travel grants (which include participation fee waiver)

to highly motivated and talented MSc or PhD students.

Preference will be given to: students who actively participate in the Student Session or a Workshop; students from Erasmus Mundus Programs in relevant areas; students without alternative financial support for the participation; outstanding and highly motivated students.

Applications should contain:

  1. ESSLLI 2016 grant application form [PDF] (Download and compile the pdf form, print it, sign it, and include it in your application).
  2. Proof of valid student status.
  3. Motivation letter.
  4. CV.

The above documents have to be combined in a single pdf, and submitted via EasyChair before April 25, 2016. (Since we are using Easychair, the submission will be handled as a paper submission, hence you will be asked for a title, and keywords. Feel free to put whatever you like in these fields, they will be ignored.).

Note, the grant application form includes a statement of endorsement, which must be signed by an endorsing faculty member who is well acquainted with the applicant (such as a thesis supervisor or lecturer).

Students who have applied for an ESSLLI 2016 grant will be notified via e-mail by beginning of June 2016 about the outcome of their application. Students who are awarded a grant might be asked to provide some help in the organization during their participation to ESSLLI 2016.

Further grants

Information about grants sponsored by Companies and Associations will be posted here. We will update the information as new sponsorships are confirmed.


Accommodation

The following map provides an overview of all locations where we have provided accommodation for students and/or lectures:

Student Accommodation Options

We are aware that accommodations are still available at the Youth Hostel Bolzano and at Koepinghaus Bolzano.

Lecturer Accommodation Options

People interested in booking an accommodation by themselves can search for it here.