E. W. Beth Dissertation Prize

The Association for Logic, Language and Information (FoLLI) each year awards the E. W. Beth Dissertation Prize, named in honor of the Dutch mathematician Evert Willem Beth, to outstanding PhD theses in the fields of Logic, Language, and Information. Dissertations are evaluated on the basis of their technical depth, strength and originality. Each year the award can be assigned ex aequo to more than one thesis, or to no thesis at all. The prize for the year 2013 consists of a certificate, a donation of 2500 euros and an invitation to submit (a possibly revised version of) the thesis to the FoLLI Publications on Logic, Language and Information,[1] published by Springer Science+Business Media.

List of previous winners [2]

YearAuthorTitle of the ThesisInstitution
2017Antoine AmarilliLeveraging the structure of uncertain dataTélécom ParisTech
2017Ronald de HaanParameterized Complexity in the Polynomial HierarchyTechnical University of Vienna
2016Thomas ZeumeSmall Dynamic Complexity ClassesUniversity of Dortmund
2015Michał SkrzypczakDescriptive set theoretic methods in automata theoryUniversity of Warsaw
2014Thomas GrafLocal and Transderivational Constraints in Syntax and SemanticsUniversity of California, Los Angeles
2013Wesley H. HollidayKnowing What Follows: Epistemic Closure and Epistemic LogicStanford University
2013Ekaterina LebedevaExpressing Discourse Dynamics via ContinuationsUniversity of Lorraine
2012Andreas KapsnerLogics and FalsificationsUniversity of Barcelona
2012Daniel R. LicataDependently Typed Programming with Domain-Specific LogicsCarnegie Mellon University
2011Nils BullingModelling and Verifying Abilities of Rational AgentsClausthal University of Technology
2011Mohan GanesalingamThe Language of MathematicsUniversity of Cambridge
2010Yury SavateevAlgorithmic Complexity of Fragments of the Lambek CalculusMoscow State University
2009Emmanuel ChemlaPresuppositions and Scalar Implicatures: Formal and Experimental StudiesEcole Normale Superieure de Paris
2009Lukasz KaiserLogic and Games on Automatic StructuresAachen University
2008Tomas BrazdilVerification of Probabilistic Recursive Sequential ProgramsMasaryk University
2008Marco KuhlmannDependency Structures and Lexicalized GrammarsSaarland University
2007Gabriele PuppisAutomata for Branching and Layered StructuresUniversity of Udine
2006Leszek KolodziejczykTruth Definitions and higher-Order Logics in Finite ModelsWarsaw University
2006Chung-chieh (Ken) ShanLinguistic Side EffectsHarvard University
2005Ash AsudehResumption as Resource ManagementUniversity of Canterbury
2004John T. HaleGrammar, Uncertainty and Sentence ProcessingMichigan State University
2003Jason BaldridgeLexically Specified Derivational Control in Combinatory Categorial GrammarUniversity of Edinburgh
2002Maria AloniQuantification under conceptual coversUniversity of Amsterdam
2001Gerald PennThe Algebraic Structure of Attributed Type SignaturesUniversity of Toronto
2000Jelle GerbrandyBisimulations on Planet KripkeUniversity of Amsterdam
2000Khalil Sima'anLearning Efficient DisambiguationUniversities of Amsterdam and of Utrecht
1999Peter GrünwaldThe Minimum Description Length Principle and Reasoning under UncertaintyUniversity of Amsterdam
1999Matthew StoneModality in Dialogue: Planning, Pragmatics and ComputationUniversity of Pennsylvania
1998Nir FriedmanModeling Beliefs in Dynamic SystemsStanford University
1998Lisa MatthewsonDeterminer Systems and Quantificational Strategies: Evidence from SalishUniversity of British Columbia

References

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