Monotonicity in Logic and Language Second Tsinghua Interdisciplinary Workshop on Logic, Language and Meaning, TLLM 2020, Beijing, China, December 17-20, 2020, Proceedings için kapak resmi
Monotonicity in Logic and Language Second Tsinghua Interdisciplinary Workshop on Logic, Language and Meaning, TLLM 2020, Beijing, China, December 17-20, 2020, Proceedings
Başlık:
Monotonicity in Logic and Language Second Tsinghua Interdisciplinary Workshop on Logic, Language and Meaning, TLLM 2020, Beijing, China, December 17-20, 2020, Proceedings
ISBN:
9783662628430
Edition:
1st ed. 2020.
Yayın Bilgileri:
Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer, 2020.
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
IX, 239 p. 123 illus., 17 illus. in color. online resource.
Series:
Theoretical Computer Science and General Issues, 12564
Contents:
New logical perspectives on monotonicity -- Universal free choice from concessive conditions in Tibetan -- Monotonicity in syntax -- Attributive measure phrases in Mandarin: monotonicity and distributivity -- Universal quanti cation in Mandarin -- Monotonicity in minimal change semantics, given Gärdenfors' triviality result -- Are causes ever too strong? Downward monotonicity causal domain -- Morphosyntactic patterns follow monotonic mappings -- Negative polarity additive particles -- A causal analysis of modal syllogisms -- Bipartite exhaustification: evidence from Vietnamese -- Comparatives bring a degree-based NPI licenser.
Abstract:
Edited in collaboration with FoLLI, the Association of Logic, Language and Information this book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the Second Interdisciplinary Workshop on Logic, Language, and Meaning, TLLM 2020, held in Tsinghua, China, in December 2020. The 12 full papers together presented were fully reviewed and selected from 40 submissions. Due to COVID-19 the workshop will be held online. The workshop covers a wide range of topics where monotonicity is discussed in the context of logic, causality, belief revision, quantification, polarity, syntax, comparatives, and various semantic phenomena in particular languages.
Dil:
English