Congreso, coloquio o simposio
The 6th International FrameNet Workshop 2025 (IFNW2025): Frames and Cognitively Grounded Language Resources in Linguistics and AI,” will be held on March 7th and 8th, 2025, on Hiyoshi Campus of Keio University in Yokohama, Japan. IFNW2025 aims to:
- Discuss the role of cognitively grounded language resources in linguistics and AI applications; and
- Connect the Global FrameNet community, Construction Grammarians, and AI researchers across the globe including Japan.
This workshop will be held as a NINJAL International Symposium and co-hosted by NINJAL (National Institute for Japanese Language and Linguistics) and Keio University.
IFNW 2025 follows from five previous editions, one in 2023, held in Düsseldorf, Germany, one in 2020, held online, one in 2018, held in Miyazaki, Japan, one in 2016, held in Juiz de Fora, Brazil, and one in 2013, held in Berkeley, USA.
Friday, Mar. 7th 13:00-17:00
13:00-13:10 Opening
13:10-14:25 FrameNet/Constructicon Building
13:10-13:50 Invited Talk 1: Benjamin Lyngfelt "Connecting constructions: Network relations in the Swedish Constructicon" [Abstract]
13:50-13:55 Short Break
13:55-14:25 Nina Böbel "The German FrameNet-Constructicon meets Universal Dependencies" [Abstract]
14:25-14:45 Break
14:45-15:25 Invited Talk 2: Marie-Claude L’Homme "Domain-specific framenets: why it is a good idea and a few challenges" [Abstract]
15:25-15:30 Short Break
15:30-16:30 FrameNet Analysis
15:30-16:00 Amanda Pestana and Tiago Torrent "How Visual Elements in Manga Contribute to Meaning Construction of Onomatopoeias: A Multimodal FrameNet Analysis" [Abstract]
16:00-16:30 Masaru Kanetani "What and how do artifacts speak to us? A FrameNet analysis of object-to-human communication" [Abstract]
17:00- Reception
Saturday, Mar. 8th 9:30-17:00
9:30-12:05 FrameNet and AI (Part 1)
9:30-10:10 Invited Talk 3: Ryohei Sasano "Building Semantic Frame Resources Using Large Language Models" [Abstract]
10:10-10:15 Short Break
10:15-10:45 Fabian Barteld, Susanne Triesch-Herrmann, Alexander Ziem, and Oliver Czulo "Semi-automatic annotation of pragmatic frames using BERT" [Abstract]
10:45-11:05 Break
11:05-11:35 Anna Endresen, Valentina Zhukova, and Laura A. Janda "We asked ChatGPT about 2200 multi-word constructions and this is what we found" [Abstract]
11:35-12:05 Ran Iwamoto and Kyoko Ohara "How to Improve Generative AI with Frame Name Annotation in Prompts" [Abstract]
12:05-13:35 Lunch Break
13:45-16:30 FrameNet/Constructicon Building and FrameNet Analysis
13:45-14:25 Invited Talk 4: Alexander Ziem "Extending the German FrameNet: using frames for identifying frame families and functional similarity among constructions" [Abstract]
14:25-14:30 Short break
14:30-15:00 Kazuho Kambara and Hajime Nozawa "Frame Classification based on Nouns’ Participatability: A Case Study of Antonymic Verbs" [Abstract]
15:00-15:30 Daria Mordashova, Valentina Zhukova, and Anna Endresen "Comparing Russian comparatives to Berkeley FrameNet and Comparative Concepts" [Abstract]
15:30-15:50 Break
15:50-16:30 FrameNet and AI (Part 2)
15:50-16:30 Invited Talk 5: Tiago Timponi Torrent "FrameNet for Responsible, Explainable AI" [Abstract]
16:30-16:50 Round-table discussion
16:50-17:00 Closing
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