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Bonnie Lynn Webber (webber-bl)

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Bibliography

    Cristea, Dan and Webber, Bonnie Lynn. 1997. Expectations in Incremental Discourse Parsing.” in ACL-97. Proceedings of the 35th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics and Eighth Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics, edited by Paul R. Cohen and Wolfgang Wahlster, pp. 88–95. Somerset, New Jersey: Association for Computational Linguistics.
    Eugenio, Barbara di and Webber, Bonnie Lynn. 1992. Plan Recognition in Understanding Instructions.”
    Gardent, Claire and Webber, Bonnie Lynn. 2001. Towards the Use of Automated Reasoning in Discourse Disambiguation.” Journal of Logic, Language, and Information 10(4): 487–509.
    Grosz, Barbara J., Sparck Jones, Karen and Webber, Bonnie Lynn, eds. 1986. Readings in Natural Language Processing. San Francisco, California: Morgan Kaufmann Publishers.
    Joshi, Arivind K., Webber, Bonnie Lynn and Sag, Ivan A., eds. 1981. Elements of Discourse Understanding – Proceedings of the Pennsylvania Workshop on Computational Aspects of Linguistic Structure and Discourse Setting. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    Joshi, Arivind K., Webber, Bonnie Lynn and Weischedel, Ralph M. 1984. Living up to Expectations: Computing Expert Responses.” in AAAI-84. Proceedings of the Fourth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence, edited by Ronald J. Brachman. Menlo Park, California: The AAAI Press.
    Kuipers, Benjamin J. and Webber, Bonnie Lynn, eds. 1997. AAAI-97. Proceedings of the Fourteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence. Menlo Park, California: The AAAI Press.
    Pollack, Martha E., Hirschberg, Julia and Webber, Bonnie Lynn. 1982. User Participation in the Reasoning Processes of Expert Systems.” ms–cis–82–10. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Department of Computer; Information Science, University of Pennsylvania. A short version of this report appears in the Proceedings of the National Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 1982.
    Stone, Matthew, Doran, Christine, Webber, Bonnie Lynn, Bleam, Tonia and Palmer, Martha S. 2003. Microplanning with Communicative Intentions: The SPUD System.” Computational Intelligence 19(4).
    Stone, Matthew and Webber, Bonnie Lynn. 1998. Textual Economy through Close Coupling of Syntax and Semantics.” in INLG’98. Proceedings of the Ninth International Workshop on Natural Language Generation, edited by Eduard H. Hovy, pp. 178–187. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Association for Computational Linguistics.
    Webber, Bonnie Lynn. 1978. A Formal Approach to Discourse Anaphora.” 3761. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Bolt, Beranek; Newman, Inc.
    Webber, Bonnie Lynn. 1983. Logic and Natural Language.” IEEE Computer 16(10): 43–46.
    Webber, Bonnie Lynn. 1987. Logic and Natural Language.” in The Knowledge Frontier. Essays in the Representation of Knowledge, edited by Nick Cercone and Gordon I. McCalla, pp. 92–102. Berlin: Springer.
    Webber, Bonnie Lynn. 1988a. Discourse Deixis and Discourse Processing.” mis–cs–88-75. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Department of Computer; Information Science, University of Pennsylvania.
    Webber, Bonnie Lynn. 1988b. Tense as Discourse Anaphor.” Computational Linguistics 14(2): 61–73.
    Webber, Bonnie Lynn. 1990. Structure and Ostension in the Interpretation of Discourse Deixis.” linc lab 183, ms-cis-90-58. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Computer; Information Science Department, University of Pennsylvania.
    Webber, Bonnie Lynn. 1991. Structure and Ostension in the Interpretation of Discourse Deixis.” Natural Language and Cognitive Processes 6(2): 107–135.
    Webber, Bonnie Lynn. 1995a. ‘Do Nothing till You Hear from Me’: Composing Processes with Termination Conditions.” in AAAI-95. Working Notes of the 1995 AAAI Fall Symposium on Embodied Language and Action, Cambridge MA, November 1995, edited by Ian Horswill and Marilyn A. Walker. Menlo Park, California: The AAAI Press.
    Webber, Bonnie Lynn. 1995b. Instructing Animated Agents: Viewing Language in Behavioral Terms.”
    Webber, Bonnie Lynn. 2007. Word Play.” Computational Linguistics 33(4): 591–595.
    Webber, Bonnie Lynn, Badler, Norman, Brechenridge, Baldwin, Becket, Welton, Eugenio, Barbara di, Gelb, Christopher, Jung, Moon, Levison, Libby, Moore, Michael S. and White, Michael J. 1992. Doing What You’re Told: Following Task Instructions in Changing, But Hospitable Environments.” linc lab 236, ms-cis-92-74. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Computer; Information Science Department, University of Pennsylvania.
    Webber, Bonnie Lynn, Carberry, Sandra M., Clarke, John R., Gertner, Abigail, Harvey, Terrence, Rymon, Ron and Washington, Richard. 1998. Exploiting Multiple Goals and Intentions in Decision Support for the Management of Multiple Trauma: A Review of the TraumAID Project.” Artificial Intelligence 105(1–2): 263–293.
    Webber, Bonnie Lynn, Clarke, John R., Niv, Michael, Rymon, Ron and Ibáñez, Marin Milagros. 1990. TraumAID: Reasoning and Planning in the Initial Definitive Management of Multiple Injuries.” ms–cis–90–50. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Department of Computer; Information Science, University of Pennsylvania.
    Webber, Bonnie Lynn and Joshi, Arivind K. 1998. Anchoring a Lexicalized Tree-Adjoining Grammar for Discourse.” in Discourse Relations and Discourse Markers: Proceedings of the Conference, edited by Manfred Stede, Leo Wanner, and Eduard H. Hovy, pp. 86–92. Somerset, New Jersey: Association for Computational Linguistics.
    Webber, Bonnie Lynn, Knott, Alisdair, Stone, Matthew and Joshi, Aravind. 1999. Discourse Relations: A Structuralized and Presuppositional Account Using Lexicalized TAG.” Unpublished manuscript, University of Edinburgh.
    Webber, Bonnie Lynn and Nilsson, Nils J., eds. 1981. Readings in Artificial Intelligence. San Francisco, California: Morgan Kaufmann Publishers.
    Webber, Bonnie Lynn, Stone, Matthew, Joshi, Arivind K. and Knott, Alisdair. 2003. Anaphora and Discourse Structure.” Computational Linguistics 29(4): 545–587.
    Webber, Bonnie Lynn and Weischedel, Ralph M., eds. 1984. COLING’84: Proceedings of the Tenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics. Menlo Park, California: The AAAI Press.