Dear Madam/Sir,
Please forward this CFP to corpora-list's members
Regards
--Max Silberztein
NLDB 2023
The 28th International Conference on Natural Language & Information Systems
21-23 June 2023, University of Derby, United Kingdom.
https://www.derby.ac.uk/events/latest-events/nldb-2023/
About NLDB
The 28th International Conference on Natural Language & Information
Systems will be held at the University of Derby, United Kingdom and
will be a face to face event.
Since 1995, the NLDB conference brings together researchers, industry
practitioners, and potential users interested in various application
of Natural Language in the Database and Information Systems field. The
term "Information Systems" has to be considered in the broader sense
of Information and Communication Systems, including Big Data, Linked
Data and Social Networks.
The field of Natural Language Processing (NLP) has itself recently
experienced several exciting developments. In research, these
developments have been reflected in the emergence of neural language
models (Deep Learning, Word Embeddings, Transformers) and the
importance of aspects such as transparency, bias and fairness, a
(renewed) interest in various linguistic phenomena, such as in
discourse and argumentation mining, and in new problems such as the
detection of disinformation and hate speech in social media, as well
of mental health disorders that increased during the recent pandemic.
Regarding applications, NLP systems have evolved to the point that
they now offer real-life, tangible benefits to enterprises. Many of
these NLP systems are now considered a de-facto offering in business
intelligence suites, such as algorithms for recommender systems and
opinion mining/sentiment analysis.
It is against this backdrop of recent innovations in NLP and its
applications in information systems that the 28th edition of the NLDB
conference takes place. We welcome research and industrial
contributions, describing novel, previously unpublished works on NLP
and its applications across a plethora of topics as described in the
Call for Papers.
Call for Papers
NLDB 2023 invites authors to submit papers for oral or poster
presentations on unpublished research that addresses theoretical
aspects, algorithms, applications, architectures for applied and
integrated NLP, resources for applied NLP, and other aspects of NLP,
as well as survey and discussion papers. This year's edition of NLDB
also introduces an Industry Track, to foster fruitful interaction
between the industry and the research community.
Topics of interest include but are not limited to:
Social Media and Web Analytics: Opinion mining/sentiment analysis,
irony/sarcasm detection; detection of fake reviews and deceptive
language; detection of harmful information: fake news and hate speech;
sexism and misogyny; detection of mental health disorders;
identification of stereotypes and social biases; robust NLP methods
for sparse, ill-formed texts; recommendation systems.
Deep Learning and eXplainable Artificial Intelligence (XAI): Deep
learning architectures, word embeddings, transparency,
interpretability, fairness, debiasing, ethics.
• Argumentation Mining and Applications: Automatic detection of
argumentation components and relationships; creation of resource (e.g.
annotated corpora, treebanks and parsers); Integration of NLP
techniques with formal, abstract argumentation structures;
Argumentation Mining from legal texts and scientific articles.
• Question Answering (QA): Natural language interfaces to databases,
QA using web data, multi-lingual QA, non-factoid QA(how/why/opinion
questions, lists), geographical QA, QA corpora and training sets, QA
over linked data (QALD).
• Corpus Analysis: multi-lingual, multi-cultural and multi-modal
corpora; machine translation, text analysis, text classification and
clustering; language identification; plagiarism detection; information
extraction: named entity, extraction of events, terms and semantic
relationships.
• Semantic Web, Open Linked Data, and Ontologies: Ontology learning
and alignment, ontology population, ontology evaluation, querying
ontologies and linked data, semantic tagging and classification,
ontology-driven NLP, ontology-driven systems integration.
• Natural Language in Conceptual Modelling: Analysis of natural
language descriptions, NLP in requirement engineering, terminological
ontologies, consistency checking, metadata creation and harvesting.
• Natural Language and Ubiquitous Computing: Pervasive computing,
embedded, robotic and mobile applications; conversational agents; NLP
techniques for Internet of Things (IoT); NLP techniques for ambient
intelligence
• Big Data and Business Intelligence: Identity detection, semantic
data cleaning, summarisation, reporting, and data to text.
Important Dates:
Full paper submission: 14 March, 2023
Paper notification: 10 April, 2023
Camera-ready deadline: 24 April, 2023
Conference: 21-23 June 2023
Submission Guidelines
Authors should follow the LNCS format
(https://www.springer.com/gp/computer-science/lncs/conference-proceedings-gu…
) and submit their manuscripts in pdf via Easychair
(https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=nldb2023 )
Submissions can be full papers (12 pages maximum including
references), short papers (8 pages including references) or papers for
a poster presentation or system demonstration (6 pages including
references). The programme committee may decide to accept some full
papers as short papers or poster papers.
The reviewing process of NLDB 2023 is double-blind, i.e., submissions
to the main conference and to the industry track must not contain
author names or other identifying information, such as funding
sources, acknowledgments and must use the third person to refer to
work the authors have previously undertaken. System demonstration
papers may not be anonymous.
Committee
Conference Chairs:
Manning Warren, University of Derby, UK
Métais Elisabeth, Conservatoire des Arts et Métiers, Paris, France
Meziane Farid, University of Derby, UK
Program Chairs:
Reiff-Marganiec Stephan, University of Derby, UK
Sugumaran Vijayan, Oakland University, Rochester, USA
Programme Committee:
Abdi Asad, University of Derby, UK.
Akoka Jacky, CNAM & TEM, France
Anselma Luca, University of Turin, Italy
Bajaj Ahsaas, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA
Balakrishna Mithun, Limba Corp, USA
Banerjee Somnath, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy
Bensalem Imene, MISC Lab, Constantine 2 University, Algeria
Bosco Cristina, University of Turin, Italy
Braschler Martin, ZHAW School of Engineering, Switzerland
Buscaldi Davide, University Sorbonne Paris Nord, France
Cabrio Elena, Université Côte d’Azur, Inria, CNRS, I3S, France
Caselli Tommaso, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, The Netherlands
Chiruzzo Luis, Universidad de la República, Uruguay
Cignarella Alessandra Teresa, University of Turin, Italy
Cimiano Philipp, Bielefeld University, Germany
Croce Danilo, University of Rome "Tor Vergata", Italy
Delgado Agustín, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia, Spain
Dinu Liviu, University of Bucharest, Romania
Doucet Antoine, La Rochelle University, France
Fersini Elisabetta, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy
Florio Komal, University of Turin, Italy
Fomichov Vladimir, Moscow Aviation Institute, Russia
Fornaciari Tommaso, Bocconi University Milan, Italy
Franco Marc, Symanto, Germany/Spain
Frasincar Flavius, Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Hacohen-Kerner Yaakov, Jerusalem College of Technology, Israel
Horacek Helmut, DFKI, Germany
Ienco Dino, IRSTEA, France
Iglesias Carlos A., Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain
Ittoo Ashwin, HEC, Univ. of Liege, Belgium
Kapetanios Epaminondas, University of Hertfordshire, UK
Kedad Zoubida, UVSQ, France
Kop Christian, University of Klagenfurt, Austria
Koufakou Anna, Florida Gulf Coast University, USA
Laatar Rim, University of Sfax, Tunisia
Lai Mirko, University of Turin, Italy
Lopez Cédric, Emvista, Montpellier, France
Loukachevitch Natalia, Moscow State University, Russia
Aaisha Makkar, University of Derby
Mandl Thomas, University of Hildesheim, Germany
Martínez Paloma, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, Spain
Martínez Patricio, Universidad de Alicante, Spain
Martínez Unanue Raquel, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia, Spain
Masmoudi Abir, LIUM, University of Le Mans, France
Mazzei Alessandro, University of Turin, Italy
Métais Elisabeth, Conservatoire des Arts et Métiers, France
Meziane Farid, University of Derby, UK
Mich Luisa, University of Trento, Italy
Mimouni Nada, Conservatoire des Arts et Métiers, France
Mitrović Jelena, University of Passau, Germany
Montalvo Soto, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Spain
Montes y Gómez Manuel, INAOE Puebla, Mexico
Monti Johanna, L'Orientale University of Naples, Italy
Muñoz Rafael, Universidad de Alicante, Spain
Okky-Ibrohim Muhammad, University of Turin, Italy
Passaro Lucia, University of Pisa, Italy
Patti Viviana, University of Turin, Italy
Picca Davide, Columbia University, USA
Plaza Laura, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia, Spain
Rangel Francisco, Symanto, Germany/Spain
Reyes Antonio, Autonomous University of Baja California, Mexico
Roche Mathieu, Cirad, TETIS, France
Rosso Paolo, Universitat Politècnica de València, Spain
Saggion Horacio, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain
Sakketou Flora, Philipps-Marburg University
Sanguinetti Manuela, Università degli Studi di Cagliari, Italy
Silberztein Max, Université de Franche-Comté, France
Sprugnoli Rachele, Catholic University of the Sacred Heart Milan, Italy
Sugumaran Vijayan, Oakland University, Rochester, USA
Tagarelli Andrea, University of Calabria, Italy
Taulé Mariona, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain
Teisseire Maguelonne, Irstea, TETIS, France
Tomás David, Universidad de Alicante, Spain
Tufis Dan, RACAI, Bucharest, Romania
Uban Ana Sabina, University of Bucharest, Romania
Ureña-López Alfonso, Universidad de Jaén, Spain
Vadera Sunil, University of Salford, UK
Valencia-Garcia Rafael, Universidad de Murcia, Spain
Villatoro Esaú, Idiap Research Institute, Switzerland
Wattiau Isabelle, ESSEC, France
Zaghouani Wajdi, Hamad Bin Khalifa University, Qatar
Zubiaga Arkaitz, Queen Mary University of London, UK
RESEARCH INTERNSHIP
*Quantifying diversity of language phenomena: Case
study of multiword expressions* (LIFAT, Blois, France)
We propose a master internship position in Blois
(France). Please send an email to apply, with a
CV, a transcript of bachelor and master grades,
and a few lines explaining your motivation to
Arnaud Soulet <arnaud.soulet(a)univ-tours.fr>
<mailto:arnaud.soulet@univ-tours.fr>, as well as
Agata Savary and Thomas Lavergne
<first.last(a)universite-paris-saclay.fr>
<mailto:first.last@universite-paris-saclay.fr>.
Internship proposal description:
https://selexini.lis-lab.fr/jobs/2022/11/26/internship
Application deadline: *December 8*, 2022 (or until
filled)
------
MOTIVATION AND CONTEXT
*Diversity* of naturally occurring phenomena is a
vital heritage to be preserved in the current
progress- and optimization-driven globalization
era. Diversity has been quantified in many
domains: ecology, economy, information science,
etc. but less so in *Natural Language Processing*
(NLP). Recently, we have been addressing this
aspect with respect to a particular linguistic
phenomenon: the one of *multiword expressions *
(MWEs).
MWEs, such as (FR) /casser sa pipe/ ‘to die’
(literally to break one’s pipe) or (FR) /sortir du
lot /'to be better than others' (literally to quit
the batch), are groups of words which exhibit
unexpected properties (Baldwin & Kim, 2010;
Constant et al. 2017). Most prominently, their
meaning does not straightforwardly derive from the
meanings of their components. Language resources
dedicated to MWEs include MWE lexicons and
MWE-annotated corpora (Savary et al., 2017), while
a major computational task is to *automatically
identify MWEs *in running text. The PARSEME
network has been addressing the MWE identification
task via a series of *shared tasks* on automatic
identification of verbal MWEs (Ramisch et al.
2020). Our recent work (Lion-Bouton, 2021;
Lion-Bouton et al. 2022) is explicitly dedicated
to *quantifying diversity in MWE language
resources and MWE identification systems*. We have
adapted measures of *variety* (number of types in
a system), *balance* (equity of items in various
types) and *disparity* (differences between
types), stemming notably from ecology and
information theory (Morales 2021).
------
OBJECTIVE
The objective of this internship is to extend the
formalisation of the diversity by benefiting from
*Good-Turing frequency estimation*. Successfully
used to estimate the biomass, Good-Turing
frequency estimation is a statistical technique
for estimating the probability of encountering an
object of an unseen species, given a set of past
observations of objects from different species
(Good, 1953). Under this same principle, the idea
would be to *estimate the number of unseen MWEs
from the MWEs observed *in the corpus. Thus, it
will be possible to correct the diversity measures
to take the unseen MWEs into account and to
evaluate the possible selection bias of the corpus.
The NLP Group at the University of Mannheim [1] invites applications for
ONE PHD/POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCHER IN NATURAL LANGUAGE PROCESSING
Applicants should have a strong (undergraduate/graduate) profile in computer science, NLP, AI, machine learning or a related discipline. Applicants for the postdoc position are expected to have a proven academic track record (as demonstrated by publications at top-tier conferences) and be good team players.
The researcher will be located at the NLP group of the University of Mannheim, which is part of the larger DWS Group [2] – see DBLP [3] for a list of publications and research topics we work on. Mannheim is a very multicultural city in the south-west of Germany, we offer a sustainable life/work balance and non-toxic academic environment. We are strongly committed to diversity and welcome applications from members of underrepresented groups.
Duration: 2-3 years depending on the position and qualification.
Salary range: according to German public scale TV-L E13 100% (full time, commensurate with experience and qualifications).
Applications can be made per e-mail (jobs(a)informatik.uni-mannheim.de<mailto:jobs@informatik.uni-mannheim.de>) and should include a research statement and CV including a list of publications and published software. All documents should be e-mailed as a single PDF. All applications sent before December 20 2022 will receive full consideration. The positions remain open until filled. Potential applicants are welcome to get in touch with Simone Paolo Ponzetto for informal enquiries before applying.
Thanks!
Simone
[1] http://dws.informatik.uni-mannheim.de/nlp
[2] http://dws.informatik.uni-mannheim.de
[3] https://dblp.org/pid/04/2532
--
Simone Paolo Ponzetto
Data and Web Science Group
University of Mannheim, Germany
http://dws.informatik.uni-mannheim.de/ponzetto
Tel: +49 621 181 2647
Dear All,
We are pleased to announce an online meeting with the organizers of the
task Learning With Disagreements (LeWiDi) shared task @Semeval2023, to find
out more about the task.
*WHEN?* FRIDAY, 2TH DEC 2022, 1 p.m. CET
*WHERE?* ON ZOOM
*WHO?* The online meeting is open to everyone who is interested in the
task, also who's not subscribed yet
*WHAT?* The meeting will be structured as follow:
- introduction to datasets and task from the organisers
- Q&A time
*HOW?* find the details of the meeting:
- on the pages of our codalab competition
https://codalab.lisn.upsaclay.fr/competitions/6146
- by adding the event on your calendar at the following link
*https://calendar.google.com/calendar/event?action=TEMPLATE&tmeid=N3RzMHJmcHBib29jYTZlNG9wcXBwYWhpb3AgbGV3aWRpc2VtZXZhbDIwMjNAbQ&tmsrc=lewidisemeval2023@gmail.com
<https://calendar.google.com/calendar/event?action=TEMPLATE&tmeid=N3RzMHJmcH…>*
We hope to see you numerous at the meeting!
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*ABOUT THE TASK *
The assumption that natural language expressions have a single and clearly
identifiable interpretation is more and more recognized as just a
convenient idealization. Focus of LeWiDi task is entirely on subjective
tasks, where usage of aggregated labels makes much less sense.
The objective of the LeWiDi task is to provide a unified testing framework
for learning from disagreements and developing methods able to capture
them, using datasets containing disaggregated annotations.
We propose 4 diverse (textual) datasets:
- with different characteristics in terms of genres (social media and
conversations), languages (English and Arabic), tasks (misogyny, hate
speech, offensiveness detection) and annotations' methodology (experts,
specific demographic groups, AMT-crowd)
- all datasets are equipped with disaggregated annotations
- all datasets provides relevant information about annotators
We developed an *harmonized json format* for the 4 datasets so to encourage
participants in *developing methods able to capture
agreements/disagreements*, rather than focusing on developing the best
model for each dataset
Performance is evaluated using two metrics:
1. 'classical hard evaluation' (F1): how well the model predicts the
aggregated
labels (binary, based on majority)
2. 'soft' evaluation' (cross-entropy): how well the model's probabilities
reflect the level of agreement among annotators
An ideal model would have high F1 and low cross-entropy results.
PARTECIPATE:
get the data and participate
https://codalab.lisn.upsaclay.fr/competitions/6146
CONTACT US: le-wi-di-semeval2023_contactus(a)googlegroups.com
DATES:
Current status: train and dev are released, unlimited submissions via
Codalab are allowed (evaluation on dev)
January 10, 2023: evaluation phase starts, unlabeled test is released.
Limited submissions on Codalab are allowed (evaluation on test)
February 2023: Participant paper submission
March 2023: Peer review notification
April 2023: Camera-ready participant papers submission
Summer 2023: SemEval workshop (co-located with a major NLP conference)
ORGANIZERS:
Elisa Leonardelli, Fondazione Bruno Kessler (FBK), Italy
Gavin Abercrombie, Heriot-Watt University, United Kingdom
Valerio Basile, Torino University, Italy
Tommaso Fornaciari, Bocconi University, Italy
Barbara Plank, IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark
Verena Rieser, Heriot-Watt University, United Kingdom
Massimo Poesio, Queen Mary University of London, United Kingdom
Alexandra Uma, Queen Mary University of London, United Kingdom
Best regards,
the LeWiDi organizers
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*Monthly online ILFC Seminar: interactions between formal and computational
linguistics*
https://gdr-lift.loria.fr/monthy-online-ilfc-seminar/
GdR LIFT is happy to announce the three forthcoming sessions of the ILFC
seminar on the interactions between formal and computational linguistics:
- 2022/12/14 16:00-17:00 UTC+1: *Guy Emerson* (University of Cambridge;
15:00-16:00 UTC+0)
Title: *Learning meaning in a logically structured model: An
introduction to Functional Distributional Semantics*
Abstract:
*The aim of distributional semantics is to design computational techniques
that can automatically learn the meanings of words based on the contexts in
which they are observed. The mainstream approach is to represent meanings
as vectors (such as Word2Vec embeddings, or contextualised BERT
embeddings). However, vectors do not provide a natural way to talk about
basic concepts in logic and formal semantics, such as truth and reference.
While there have been many attempts to extend vector space models to
support such concepts, there does not seem to be a clear solution. In this
talk, I will instead go back to fundamentals, questioning whether we should
represent meaning as a vector I will present the framework of Functional
Distributional Semantics, which makes a clear distinction between words and
the entities they refer to. The meaning of a word is represented as a
binary classifier over entities, identifying whether the word could refer
to the entity – in formal semantic terms, whether the word is true of the
entity. The structure of the model provides a natural way to model logical
inference, semantic composition, and context-dependent meanings, where
Bayesian inference plays a crucial role. The same kind of model can also be
applied to different kinds of data, including both grounded data such as
labelled images (where entities are observed) and also text data (where
entities are latent). I will discuss results on semantic evaluation
datasets, indicating that the model can learn information not captured by
vector space models like Word2Vec and BERT. I will conclude with an outlook
for future work, including challenges and opportunities of joint learning
from different data sources.*
- 2023/01/18 17:00-18:00 UTC+1: *Carolyn Anderson* (Wellesley College;
11:00-12:00 UTC-5)
Title: [TBA]
Abstract: [TBA]
- 2023/02/15: *Steven T. Piantadosi* (UC Berkeley)
Title: [TBA]
Abstract: [TBA]
The seminar is held on Zoom. To attend the seminar and get updates, please
subscribe to our mailing list (we now only rarely communicate through other
mailing lists): https://sympa.inria.fr/sympa/subscribe/seminaire_ilfc
[Spanish version below]
Please consider contributing and/or forwarding to appropriate colleagues
and groups.
*******We apologize for the multiple copies of this e-mail******
*Call for papers for the issue 70 of the journal Procesamiento del
Lenguaje Natural*
The submission deadline for the journal Procesamiento del Lenguaje
Natural has just extended until 16 December, 2023.
*Important dates*
* *Submission deadline: 16 December 2022*
* Notification of acceptance: 31 January 2023
* Camera ready: 6 February 2023
* Publication: March 2023
Submission platform: http://myreview.sepln.org/myreview-sepln70/
**
*Introduction*
The aim of the journal Procesamiento del Lenguaje Natural is to provide
a forum for the publication of scientific-technical articles in the
field of Natural Language Processing (NLP), for both the national and
international scientific community. The articles must be unpublished and
cannot be simultaneously submitted for publication in other journals or
conference proceedings. The journal also aims to promote the development
of areas related to NLP, disseminate research carried out, identify
future guidelines for basic research, and present software applications
in this field. Every year the Sociedad Española de Procesamiento del
Lenguaje Natural (SEPLN) (Spanish Society for the Natural Language
Processing) publishes two issues of the journal, including original
articles, presentations of R&D projects, book reviews and summaries of
PhD theses.
The scientific quality of the Journal is supported by the 2021 JCR index
(JCI: 0.21, Q4-Linguistics - ESCI), the SCImago Journal Ranking (SJR:
0.217, Q4-Computer Science Applications, Q2-Linguistics and Language),
the Scopus Index (CiteScore: 1.5, Q4-Computer Science Applications,
Q2-Linguistics and Language) and the index SNIP (Source Normalized
Impact per Paper) with 0.37 points. More information at:
http://www.sepln.org/en/journal/quality.
*Topics*
* Linguistic, mathematical and psycholinguistic models of language
* Machine learning in NLP
* Computational lexicography and terminology
* Corpus linguistics
* Development of linguistic resources and tools
* Grammars and formalisms for morphological and syntactic analysis
* Semantics, pragmatics and discourse
* Word sense disambiguation
* Monolingual and multilingual text generation
* Machine translation
* Knowledge and common sense
* Multimodality
* Speech synthesis and recognition
* Dialogue systems and interactive systems/ Conversational assistants
* Audio indexing and retrieval
* Monolingual and multilingual information extraction and retrieval
* Question answering systems
* Evaluation of NLP systems
* Automatic textual content analysis
* Sentiment analysis, opinion mining and argument mining
* Plagiarism detection
* Negation and speculation processing
* Text mining in blogosphere and social networks
* Text summarization
* Text simplification
* Image retrieval
* NLP in biomedical domain
* NLP-based generation of teaching resources
* NLP for languages with limited resources
* NLP industrial applications
* Low-resource NLP tasks, data augmentation
*Submission Information*
The proposal must be submitted by *December 16nd, 2022* and must meet
certain format and style requirements.
All submissions must be in PDF format and submitted electronically using
the Myreview system available at:
*http://myreview.sepln.org/myreview-sepln70*.
Submitted papers will be subjected to a blind review by at least three
members of the program committee.
*Categories of papers*
* Regular papers with original contributions.
* Summary of PhD thesis.
*Information for Authors*
The proposals can be written in Spanish or English and should be at most
10 A4-size pages of content, plus unlimited pages for references, and 4
pages maximum for summaries of PhD theses.
The papers must include the following sections:
* The title of the communication (in English and Spanish).
* An abstract in English and Spanish (maximum 150 words).
* A list of keywords or related topics (in English and Spanish).
* The documents must not include headers or footers.
As reviewing will be blind, the paper should not include the authors’
names and affiliation. Furthermore, self-references that reveal the
author’s identity should be avoided. The articles should only include
the title, the abstract, the keywords and the proposal.
We recommend using the LaTeX and Word templates that can be downloaded
from the SEPLN web (author guidelines have been updated):
http://www.sepln.org/index.php/en/journal/author-guidelines
*Note on camera ready*
The final version of the paper (camera ready) should be submitted
together with a cover letter explaining how the suggestions of the
reviewers were implemented in the final version. This cover letter will
be considered in order to accept or finally reject the selected paper.
*Preprint policy*
The Journal allows the publication of preprints (non-refereed paper
posted online, such as ArXiv) anytime, but during the review period the
preprint must indicate that the paper it is “under review” in the
Journal Procesamiento del Lenguaje Natural. Likewise, if the paper is
accepted, the preprint must be updated with the DOI, name of the Journal
and the bibliographic information of the paper.
*Important dates*
* *Submission deadline: 16 December 2022*
* Notification of acceptance: 31 January 2023
* Camera ready: 6 February 2023
* Publication: March 2023
Contact person: Eugenio Martínez Cámara (emcamara(a)decsai.ugr.es)
Editorial Committee of the Procesamiento del Lenguaje Natural
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
***********Disculpen si reciben varias copias de este mensaje ************
Por favor, si lo considera oportuno, distribuya este llamamiento entre
sus colegas.
*Petición de artículos para la revista Procesamiento del Lenguaje
Natural nº 70.*
*Fechas importantes*
* Envío de trabajos: 16 de
diciembre de 2022
* Notificación de aceptación o rechazo: 31 de enero de 2023
* Versión final: 6 de
febrero de 2023
* Publicación: Marzo de 2023
Plataforma de envío: http://myreview.sepln.org/myreview-sepln70/
*Objetivos de la revista*
La revista Procesamiento del Lenguaje Natural es un foro de publicación
de artículos científico-técnicos en el ámbito del Procesamiento del
Lenguaje Natural (PLN), tanto para la comunidad científica nacional como
internacional. Los artículos tienen que ser inéditos y no haber sido
postulados para ser publicados simultáneamente en otras revistas o actas
de congresos. La revista quiere potenciar el desarrollo de las
diferentes áreas relacionadas con el PLN, mejorar la divulgación de las
investigaciones que se llevan a cabo, identificar las futuras
directrices de la investigación básica y mostrar las posibilidades
reales de aplicación en este campo. Anualmente la SEPLN (Sociedad
Española para el Procesamiento del Lenguaje Natural) publica dos números
de la revista, que incluyen artículos originales, presentaciones de
proyectos, reseñas bibliográficas y resúmenes de tesis doctorales.
La calidad científica de la Revista está respaldada por el índice del
JCR 2021 (JCI: 0,21, Q4-Linguistics - ESCI), el índice SCImago Journal
Ranking (SJR: 0,217, Q4-Computer Science Applications, Q2-Linguistics
and Language), el índice de Scopus (CiteScore: 1,5, Q4-Computer Science
Applications, Q2-Linguistics and Language) y el índice SNIP (Source
Normalized Impact per Paper) con 0,37 puntos. Más información en
http://www.sepln.org/la-revista/calidad.
*Áreas temáticas*
* Modelos de lenguaje matemáticos y psicolingüísticos
* Aprendizaje automático en PLN
* Lexicografía y terminología computacional
* Lingüística de corpus
* Desarrollo de recursos y herramientas lingüísticas
* Gramáticas y formalismos para análisis morfológico y sintáctico
* Semántica, pragmática y discurso
* Resolución de ambigüedad léxico-semántica
* Generación de texto monolingüe y multilingüe
* Traducción automática
* Multimodalidad
* Reconocimiento y síntesis de habla
* Sistemas de diálogo/ asistentes conversacionales
* Auto-indexación
* Recuperación y extracción de información monolingüe y multilingüe
* Sistemas de búsqueda de respuestas
* Evaluación de sistemas de PLN
* Análisis automático de contenido textual
* Análisis de sentimiento y minería de opiniones
* Detección de plagio
* Procesamiento de la negación y la especulación
* Minería de texto en la blogosfera y las redes sociales
* Resumen automático de texto
* Simplificación de texto
* Recuperación de imágenes
* Conocimiento y sentido común
* PLN en el ámbito biomédico
* Generación de recursos didácticos basada en PLN
* PLN para lenguas con recursos limitados
* Aplicaciones industriales del PLN
* Tratamiento del Lenguaje Hablado
*Envío de trabajos*
Las propuestas de trabajos (artículos y resúmenes de tesis) podrán ser
enviadas hasta la fecha límite del *16 de diciembre de 2022*.
El envío y la revisión de las propuestas se realizarán exclusivamente en
formato PDF y se gestionarán a través del sistema Myreview:
*http://myreview.sepln.org/myreview-sepln70/*.
La evaluación de los trabajos pasará por un proceso de revisión ciego
realizado como mínimo por tres miembros del consejo asesor de la SEPLN.
*Tipos de trabajos*
* Artículos sobre contribuciones originales.
* Reseñas de tesis doctorales.
*Instrucciones para los Autores*
Los trabajos pueden estar escritos en español o en inglés y su longitud
máxima será de 10 páginas de contenido más un número ilimitado de
páginas de referencias para los artículos científicos, y de un máximo de
4 páginas para los resúmenes de tesis.
Las propuestas deben contener los siguientes apartados:
* El título del artículo (en español e inglés).
* Un resumen en español y un abstract en inglés de un máximo de 150
palabras.
* Un listado de temas relacionados o palabras clave (en español e inglés).
* Los documentos no podrán incluir cabeceras ni pies de página.
Como la fase de revisión de los trabajos es ciega, en los artículos que
se envíen no se debe incluir ninguna referencia a los autores ni
referencias propias que revelen la identidad de los mismos. Todas las
contribuciones deben contener únicamente el título, el resumen, las
palabras claves y la propuesta.
En el caso de los resúmenes de tesis, el anonimato no es necesario.
Los trabajos deben seguir el formato de las revistas de la SEPLN
disponible en la siguiente dirección:
http://www.sepln.org/la-revista/informacion-para-autores
Las guías se han actualizado, por favor, utilicen las que están
disponibles en la página web de la revista.
*Nota sobre la versión final*
La versión final del trabajo (camera ready) debe enviarse con un
documento en el que se explique cómo se han implementado las sugerencias
de los revisores. Dicho documento se tendrá en cuenta para aceptar o
rechazar el trabajo en cuestión.
*Política de prepublicación*
La revista permite publicar una versión no revisada de los artículos en
plataformas de prepublicación (plataformas de artículos no evaluados
como ArXiv). Sin embargo, durante el periodo de revisión se debe indicar
que el artículo está “en revisión” en la revista Procesamiento del
Lenguaje Natural. Si el artículo es aceptado, se debe actualizar la
publicación en la plataforma de prepublicación con el DOI, nombre de la
revista y la información bibliográfica del artículo.
*Fechas importantes*
* Envío de trabajos: 16 de
diciembre de 2022
* Notificación de aceptación o rechazo: 31 de enero de 2023
* Versión final: 6 de
febrero de 2023
* Publicación: Marzo de 2023
Persona de contacto: Eugenio Martínez Cámara (emcamara(a)decsai.ugr.es)
Consejo de redacción de la revista Procesamiento del Lenguaje Natural.
--
Eugenio Martínez Cámara
Profesor Ayudante Doctor | Junior Lecturer
DaSCI, Instituto Andaluz de Inteligencia Artificial | DaSCI, Andalusian Institute in Artificial Intelligence.
Dpto. Ciencias de la Computación e Inteligencia Artificial | Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence department.
Universidad de Granada
Dear colleagues,
We are very pleased to announce that the 10th edition of the Conference on Computer-Mediated Communication and Social Media Corpora (CMC-CORPORA) will be jointly hosted by Mannheim University and the Leibniz Institute for the German Language on September 14-15, 2023 in Mannheim, Germany. Save the date!
For more information go to https://www.uni-mannheim.de/cmc-corpora2023/ .
The Call for Papers will be released in January 2023. The submission deadline will be around the end of April 2023.
Looking forward to seeing you there!
The Organizers:
Jutta Bopp, Louis Cotgrove, Laura Herzberg, Harald Lüngen, Andreas Witt
EACL 2023 Student Research Workshop Second Call for Papers
View on the web at
https://sites.google.com/view/eacl2023srw/call-for-papers
Main Conference: May 2-6, 2023
Paper Submission Deadline: December 16, 2022
==============
## General Rules for Submission
The EACL 2023 Student Research Workshop (SRW) provides a forum for
student researchers who are investigating various areas related to
Computational Linguistics and Natural Language Processing. The workshop
provides an excellent opportunity for student participants to present
their work and receive valuable feedback from the international research
community. The workshop’s goal is to aid students at multiple stages of
their education: including undergraduate, masters, junior, and senior
PhD students.
We invite papers in two different categories:
Thesis Proposals: This category is appropriate for PhD students who have
decided on a thesis topic and wish to get feedback on their proposal and
ideas about future directions for their work.
Research Papers: Papers in this category can describe completed work, or
work-in-progress with preliminary results. For these papers, the first
author MUST BE a current graduate or undergraduate student. We encourage
submissions from Ph.D. students, as well as Masters or advanced
undergraduate students. Topics of interest for the SRW are the same as
for the main conference (https://2023.eacl.org/calls/papers/).
Please see the submission guidelines page for more information at
https://sites.google.com/view/eacl2023srw/submission-guidelines.
==============
## Benefits of participation
All accepted papers and thesis proposals will be presented in the main
conference poster session, giving students an opportunity to interact
with and present their work to a large and diverse audience, including
top researchers in the field and assigned mentors.
Submissions (in both categories) may either be archival or non-archival,
based on the wishes of the authors. All archival papers will be
published in the EACL 2023 SRW Proceedings. All non-archival papers may
be submitted to any venue in the future except another SRW.
Each willing participant is also assigned a mentor - an experienced
researcher - who can provide mentoring during the conference.
==============
## Important Dates
Paper submission deadline: December 16, 2022
Acceptance notification: February 24, 2023
Camera-ready deadline: March 17, 2023
EACL conference dates: May 2-6, 2023
All deadlines are 11:59PM UTC-12:00 (“anywhere on Earth”).
==============
## Submission Requirements
We accept both archival submissions (i.e., the work can be included in
the conference proceedings) and non-archival submissions (the work will
be presented in the workshop, but will not be part of the proceedings).
The “archival” submissions should follow the anonymity period and
restrictions of the main conference as appears in
https://2023.eacl.org/calls/papers/.
Papers can be submitted as short or long papers.
Short papers consist of up to four (4) pages of content, plus unlimited
references. Upon acceptance, they will be given five (5) content pages
in the proceedings.
Long papers consist of up to eight (8) pages of content, plus unlimited
references. Upon acceptance, they will be given nine (9) content pages
in the proceedings.
Thesis proposals consist of up to eight (8) pages of content, plus
unlimited references. Upon acceptance, they will be given nine (9)
content pages in the proceedings.
Authors are encouraged to use this additional page to address reviewers’
comments in their final versions.
Paper submissions must use the official EACL 2023 style templates. All
submissions must be in PDF format and must conform to the official style
guidelines, which are contained in these template files. The review
process is blind; hence, all submissions must be anonymized.
The SRW invites papers on topics related to computational linguistics,
including but not limited to:
Anaphora, Discourse and Pragmatics
Computational Social Science and Social Media
Dialogue and Interactive Systems
Document analysis, Text Categorization and Topic Models
Generation and Summarization
Ethical and Sustainable NLP
Information Retrieval and Search
Information Extraction
Interpretability and Model Analysis in NLP
Language Resources and Evaluation
Language Grounding and Multi-Modality
Linguistic Theories, Cognitive Modeling and Psycholinguistics
Machine Learning in NLP
Machine Translation
Multilinguality
Multidisciplinary and NLP Applications
Question Answering
Semantics: lexical
Semantics: sentence level and other areas
Sentiment Analysis and Argument Mining
Phonology, Morphology, and Word Segmentation
Tagging, Chunking, Syntax, and Parsing
Student Research Workshop Co-Chairs
Elisa Bassignana, IT University of Copenhagen
Matthias Lindemann, University of Edinburgh
Alban Petit, University of Paris-Saclay
Student Research Workshop Faculty Advisor
Valerio Basile, University of Turin
Contact
The organizers of the workshop can be contacted by email at
eacl.srw23(a)gmail.com
More details can be found at https://sites.google.com/view/eacl2023srw
NBME (National Board of Medical Examiners)
Summer 2023 Internships in Assessment Science, Psychometrics, and Educational Technology
June 5 - July 28, 2023
This year's internship is fully virtual. Both part-time and full-time internship positions are available. The internship is suitable for students that have completed at least two years of coursework and are actively enrolled in a doctoral program in computer science, statistics, measurement, cognitive science, medical education, or related field. Interns will be assigned to one or more mentors and will interact with other graduate students and NBME staff. The expected deliverables from the summer internship project are an internal research presentation, as well as a conference submission / presentation and/or a paper submitted for publication. Application deadline is Tuesday, January 31, 2023, at midnight PST. More information about the summer internship program can be found in the application portal: https://nbme.applicantpro.com/jobs/2627749.html
Compensation
The pay is $45 an hour. Total stipend for full-time interns (35 hours per week) is $12,600. Total stipend for part-time interns will range from $5,400 (15 hour per week) to $7,200 (20 hours per week). Applicants will indicate their preference (full-time and/or part-time) when applying. In addition, NBME will provide a $1000 stipend toward attending a conference for all full-time and part-time interns.
If you have any questions or need additional information, please contact Chris Runyon: CRunyon(a)nbme.org<mailto:CRunyon@nbme.org>
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