*ESSAI - European Summer School in Artificial Intelligence*24-28 July 2023
Ljubljana, Slovenia
**CALL FOR COURSE PROPOSALS**
The 1st European Summer School in Artificial Intelligence - ESSAI 2023,
24-28 July, 2023, at the University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Computer and
Information Science, Ljubljana, Slovenia
https://essai.ijs.si/
*IMPORTANT DATES:*
24 Jan 2023: Course Title submission deadline (mandatory)
31 Jan 2023: Final submission
28 Feb 2023: Notification
The European Summer School in Artificial Intelligence (ESSAI) is a new
annual summer school held under the auspices of the European Association
for Artificial Intelligence (EurAI). The ambition of ESSAI is to become
the central meeting place for students and young researchers in Artificial
Intelligence to discuss current research and share knowledge.
ESSAI will provide an interdisciplinary setting in which courses are
offered in all areas of Artificial Intelligence and also from wider
scientific, historical, and philosophical perspectives. The format of ESSAI
is analogous to the European Summer School in Logic, Language and
Information (ESSLLI) which has been running since 1989. Courses will
consist of five 90 minute sessions, offered daily (Monday-Friday) in a
single week, to allow students to develop in-depth knowledge of a topic.
The first ESSAI will be held in Ljubljana, Slovenia in between the 24th and
28th of July 2023. ESSAI 2023 aims to attract around 400 participants from
all parts of Europe, as well as from North and Latin America, and Asia.
*TOPICS AND FORMAT*
ESSAI aims to cover all subdisciplines of AI and the interactions between
them.
Proposals for courses at ESSAI 2023 are invited in all areas of Artificial
Intelligence, including but not limited to the following:
* Agent-based and Multi-agent Systems (MAS)
* Ethics, Legal Issues, Explainable and Trustworthy AI (XAI)
* Knowledge Representation and Reasoning (KR)
* Natural Language Processing (NLP)
* Neuro-Symbolic Learning and Reasoning (NeSy)
* Planning & Strategic Reasoning (PLAN)
* Reinforcement Learning (RL)
* Robotics (ROB)
* Search & Optimization (SO)
* Supervised and Unsupervised Learning (ML)
* Vision (VIS)
Each course will consist of five 90 minute lectures, offered daily
(Monday-Friday) in a single week.
While foundational courses will typically focus on one subarea of AI,
introductory and advanced courses are encouraged to present a broader
perspective on AI, and should be of interest beyond one specific area.
*CATEGORIES*
Each proposal should fall under one of the following categories.
* FOUNDATIONAL COURSES *
Foundational courses present the basics of a research area to students with
no prior knowledge in that area. They should be at an elementary level,
without prerequisites in the course's topic, though possibly assuming a
level of general scientific maturity in the relevant discipline. They
should enable researchers from related disciplines to become comfortable
with the fundamental concepts and techniques of the course topic, thereby
contributing to the interdisciplinary nature of our research community.
* INTRODUCTORY COURSES *
Introductory courses are central to ESSAI's mission. They are intended to
introduce a research field to students, young researchers, and other
non-specialists, and to foster a sound understanding of its basic methods
and techniques. Introductory courses should enable researchers from related
disciplines to become competent in the course topic. Introductory courses
that are cross-disciplinary may presuppose general knowledge of the
relevant disciplines.
* ADVANCED COURSES *
Advanced courses are targeted primarily at graduate students who wish to
acquire an understanding of current research in a field of Artificial
Intelligence.
*PROPOSAL GUIDELINES*
To be considered, course proposals should closely adhere to the following
guidelines:
Course proposals can be submitted by no more than two lecturers, and
courses must be presented by lecturers who submitted the proposal. All
lecturers must possess a PhD or equivalent degree by the submission
deadline for course proposals.
Course proposals should explicitly state the intended course category.
Proposals for introductory courses should indicate the intended level, for
example, as it relates to standard textbooks and monographs in the area.
Proposals for advanced courses should specify the prerequisites in detail.
Proposals must be submitted in PDF format via:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=essai2023
and include all of the following:
a. Personal information for each proposer: Name, affiliation, contact
address, email, homepage (optional)
b. General proposal information: Title, category
c. Information about the course content:
Abstract of up to 150 words
Motivation and description (up to two pages)
Tentative outline
Expected level and prerequisites
Appropriate references (e.g. textbooks, monographs, proceedings,
surveys)
d. Information about the proposer(s) and course:
Whether the course will appeal to students outside of the main
discipline of the course
Proposer(s)’s experience of delivering courses in an intensive
one-week interdisciplinary setting
Evidence that the proposer(s) is an excellent lecturer
To keep participation fees to a minimum, all the instructional and
organizational work of ESSAI is performed on a completely voluntary basis.
However, the registration fees of organizers and instructors will be
waived, and travel and accommodation expenses will be reimbursed up to a
level which will be communicated along with the proposal notification.
ESSAI can only guarantee reimbursement for at most one course lecturer, and
can not guarantee full reimbursement of travel costs for lecturers from
outside of Europe. The organizers of ESSAI would appreciate any help in
reducing the School's expenses by seeking partial or complete coverage of
travel and accommodation expenses from other sources.
*SUBMISSION INFORMATION*
By Jan 24, 2023:
Proposers must submit on EasyChair at least the name(s) of the
lecturers(s), the ESSAI area+course level and a short abstract.
By Jan 31, 2023:
Submission must be completed by uploading a PDF with the actual proposal as
detailed above.
*SUBMISSION PORTAL*
Please submit your proposals to
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=essai2023
*ORGANIZING COMMITTEE*
Aleksander Sadikov (University of Ljubljana)
Vida Groznik (University of Primorska, University of Ljubljana)
Sašo Džeroski (Jožef Stefan Institute)
Jure Žabkar (University of Ljubljana)
*PROGRAM COMMITTEE*
Magdalena Ortiz (Umeå University), chair
Brian Logan (Utrecht University), associate co-chair
Sašo Džeroski (Jozef Stefan Institute Ljubljana), associate co-chair, ACAI
chair
Natasha Alechina, Utrecht University
Kristian Kersting, TU Darmstadt
Ioannis Kompatsiaris, CERTH-ITI
Roberto Navigli, Sapienza University of Rome
Ann Nowé, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Alessandro Saffiotti, University of Örebro
Sungho Suh, DFKI
*STANDING COMMITTEE *
Giuseppe De Giacomo (Sapienza University of Rome), Head and EurAI Board
Representative
--
==============================================
Roberto Navigli* - Professor*
Department of Computer, Control and Management Engineering
Sapienza University of Rome
Via Ariosto, 25
00185 Roma Italy
Phone: +39 06 77274109
Home Page: https://www.diag.uniroma1.it/navigli/
Sapienza NLP Group: http://nlp.uniroma1.it
Co-founder of Babelscape <https://babelscape.com>
==============================================
*** Apologies for cross-posting ***
FOIS 2023: 2nd Call for Papers
==============================
13th International Conference on Formal Ontology in Information Systems (FOIS 2023), July 17-20, 2023 (Sherbrooke, QC, Canada) and Sept 18-20, 2023 (Online)
http://fois2023.griis.ca
We are happy to announce three exciting keynote speakers for FOIS 2023:
- Deborah McGuinness, Tetherless World Senior Constellation Chair and Professor of Computer and Cognitive Science, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
- John Heil, Professor of Philosophy, Washington University, USA and Durham University, UK
- Michael Gruninger, Professor of Industrial Engineering, University of Toronto, Canada
More information about our keynotes speakers: https://fois2023.griis.ca/keynote-speakers/
Definition and scope
====================
The FOIS conference is a meeting point for all researchers with an interest in formal ontology. Formal ontology is the systematic study of the types of entities and relations making up the domains of interest represented in modern information systems. The conference encourages submission of high quality, not previously published results on both theoretical issues and practical advancements. FOIS 2023 will have distinct tracks for foundational issues, ontology applications and methods, and domain ontologies.
FOIS aims to be a nexus of interdisciplinary research and communication for researchers from many domains engaging with formal ontology. Common application areas include conceptual modeling, database design, knowledge engineering and management, software engineering, organizational modeling, artificial intelligence, robotics, computational linguistics, the life sciences, bioinformatics and scientific research in general, geographic information science, information retrieval, library and information science, as well as the Semantic Web.
FOIS is the flagship conference of the International Association for Ontology and its Applications (IAOA: http://iaoa.org/), which is a non-profit organization promoting interdisciplinary research and international collaboration in formal ontology.
Important dates
===============
- Paper submission deadline: 31 January 2023
- Author rebuttal period: March 24-31, 2023 (tentative)
- Notifications: April 10, 2023 (tentative)
- Camera-ready papers: May 1, 2023
- Onsite conference: July 17-20, 2023
- Virtual conference: September 18-20, 2023
The submission deadline for workshops will be after the notifications to allow authors to submit a revised version of rejected papers to any of the conference workshops if the paper topics are appropriate for this workshop.
Location
========
FOIS 2023 will consist of a physical meeting and a virtual meeting:
An in-person only meeting in Sherbrooke, Quebec from July 17 to 20, 2023 that will be very much like a traditional conference with keynotes, regular talks, workshops and tutorials and plenty of social and networking opportunities. This part will not have a remote participation option, but we plan on recording selected talks (e.g. keynotes). The main conference will be from July 17 to 19 and workshops and tutorials will be held mostly on July 20.
This will be followed by an online part to be held from September 18 to 20, 2023 that offers an opportunity for presentation and discussion of additional papers that were not presented at the physical meeting in Sherbrooke.
To plan for this two-part event, authors must at the time of submission indicate their preference and constraints for presenting either on site in Sherbrooke or virtually. Acceptance will be either for in-person presentation or for online presentation, at which time authors can no longer change the modality. Since the numbers of in-person and online presentations are limited, we encourage authors to be as flexible as possible to maximize your chance of paper acceptance. More details are provided in the Submission Instructions.
Submissions
===========
FOIS 2023 seeks three types of full-length (14 pages) high-quality papers on a wide range of topics:
Foundational papers address content-related ontological issues, their formal representation, and their relevance to some aspect of information systems.
Application and Methods papers address novel systems, methods, and tools related to building, evaluating, or using ontologies, emphasizing the impact of ontology contents.
Domain ontology papers describe a novel ontology for a specific realm of interest, clarifying ontological choices against requirements and foundational theory, and showing ontology use.
Please refer to the submission instructions for more details. As usual, the FOIS proceedings will be published by IOS Press.
The conference will also offer workshops and tutorials related to formal ontologies. See the separate call for workshops and tutorials for more information.
Topics of interest
==================
Areas of particular interest to FOIS include the following:
- Foundational Issues
- Kinds of entities: particulars/universals, continuants/occurrents, abstracta/concreta, dependent entities/independent entities, natural objects/artifacts, events/processes
- Formal relations: parthood, identity, connection, dependence, constitution, causality, subsumption, instantiation
- Vagueness and granularity
- Space, time, and change
- Methodological issues
- Top-level vs. domain-specific ontologies
- Role of reference ontologies
- Ontology similarity, integration, alignment, matching and entity reconciliation
- Ontology modularity, patterns, and contextuality
- Ontology evaluation, quality, reuse, adaptation, and evolution
- Ontology compliance with FAIR principles
- Formal comparison among ontologies
- Relationship between conceptual modeling and ontologies
- Relationship with cognition, language, semantics, and context
- Connections between knowledge graphs and ontologies
- Methodological issues in the applications of ontologies
- Social issues, such as trust or bias, with respect to ontologies
- Applications
- Technical applications of ontologies, such as
- Semantic Web
- Other areas of AI (Machine Learning, Explainable AI, Rules)
- Qualitative modeling
- Systems applications of ontologies, such as
- Ontology-driven information systems design
- Ontology-based data access
- Knowledge management
- Information retrieval
- Computational linguistics
- Metadata management
- Domain applications of ontologies, such as
- Ontologies for business modeling
- Ontologies for particular scientific disciplines (biology, chemistry, geography, physics, geoscience, cognitive sciences, linguistics, etc.)
- Ontologies for engineering: shape, form and function, artifacts, manufacturing, design, architecture, etc.
- Ontologies for the humanities: arts, cultural studies, history, literature, philosophy, etc.
- Ontologies for the social sciences: economics, law, political science, anthropology, archeology, etc.
- Ontologies for Open Science and dataset sharing
- Domain-specific ontologies
- Ontology of physical reality (matter, space, time, motion, etc.)
- Ontology of biological reality (organisms, genes, proteins, cells, etc.)
- Ontology of mental reality and agency (beliefs, intentions, emotions, perceptions, cognition, etc.)
- Ontology of artifacts, functions, capacities and roles
- Ontology of social reality (institutions, organizations, norms, social relationships, artistic expressions, etc.)
Conference Organization
=======================
General Chair: Antony Galton, University of Exeter, UK
PC Chairs: Nathalie Aussenac-Gilles, IRIT-CNRS Toulouse, France
Torsten Hahmann, University of Maine, USA
Local Organization Chair: Jean-François Ethier, University of Sherbrooke, Canada
Online Chair: Cassia Trojahn, IRIT Université Toulouse 2, France
Workshop and Tutorial Chairs: Megan Katsumi, University of Toronto, Canada
Emilio Sanfilippo, ISTC-CNR, Trento, Italy
Early Career Chairs: Antoine Zimmermann, École des Mines de Saint-Étienne (EMSE), France
Guendalina Righetti, Free University Bozen/Bolzano, Italy
Demo & Showcase Chairs: Sergio de Cesare, University of Westminster, UK
Tiago Prince Sales, University of Twente, Netherlands
Publicity Chairs: Lucia Gomez Alvarez, TU Dresden, Germany
Selja Seppälä, University College Cork, Ireland
Proceedings Chair: Maria Hedblom, Jönköping University, Sweden
Program committee: https://fois2023.griis.ca/conference-organization/
We are inviting applications for one fully funded PhD position (covering UK home tuition fees and stipend) in the Department of Computer Science, University of Sheffield (UK). Please forward this announcement to potentially interested candidates.
The deadline is January 25, 2023, with a starting date of as early as possible in 2023 (from February on). More details below and on this link <https://www.findaphd.com/phds/project/neural-and-cognitive-basis-of-computa…>.
About the Project: neural and cognitive basis of computational models of language
Advances in the design of computational models that learn directly from data has led to much progress in areas like natural language processing (NLP). We invite applications for a fully-funded PhD studentship on human- inspired computational models of language. This multidisciplinary project, at the intersection of machine learning, NLP and computational neuroscience, aims to develop computational models of language processing inspired by the neural and biological basis of human language.
Candidate requirements:
Applicants will need to meet general entry requirements, and ideally will have a Bachelor’s degree (or above) in Computer Science, Neuroscience, Physics, Cognitive Science, Psychology or related discipline (preferably a First Class or the equivalent from an overseas university). Experience on statistical machine learning, deep learning, or computational statistics, as well as programming experience would be desirable.
Additional English language requirements can be found here: <https://www.findaphd.com/common/clickCount.aspx?theid=153809&type=184&DID=1…>https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/postgraduate/english-language <https://www.findaphd.com/common/clickCount.aspx?theid=153809&type=184&DID=1…>.
How to apply
Applications for the PhD studentship must be made directly to the University of Sheffield using the Postgraduate Online Application Form. Make sure you name Aline Villavicencio as proposed supervisor. Information on what documents are required and a link to the application form can be found here - <https://www.findaphd.com/common/clickCount.aspx?theid=153809&type=184&DID=1…>https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/postgraduate/phd/apply/applying <https://www.findaphd.com/common/clickCount.aspx?theid=153809&type=184&DID=1…>
Funding Notes
This position is funded by a studentship from the Department of Computer Science, covering the UK home tuition fee and providing a stipend at the standard UKRI rate. International students are eligible to apply if they can self-fund the difference between the home and overseas fee.
More details on this link <https://www.findaphd.com/phds/project/neural-and-cognitive-basis-of-computa…>
----------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------
Prof. Aline Villavicencio
Chair in Natural Language Processing
Department of Computer Science, University of Sheffield
https://sites.google.com/view/alinevhttps://www.sheffield.ac.uk/dcs/people/academic/aline-villavicencio
Dear List,
Please take good note of the Job Opportunity at the European Commission’s Joint Research Centre (see details blow).
Please feel free to forward it to any potentially interested member of your networks.
I enjoy the opportunity to whish happy Holidays season to all.
Best Regards,
Bertrand DE LONGUEVILLE, PhD
Head of the Text Mining and Analysis Competence Centre (TMACC)
[1601448337241]
European Commission
Joint Research Centre (JRC)
Directorate T:Digital Transformation and Data<https://intracomm.ec.testa.eu/SYSPER2/org/vieworganisationjobs_jd.do?viewOb…>
Unit T5 Text and Data Mining
[cid:image002.jpg@01D91626.1637BC20]
The European Commission Text Mining and Analysis Competence Centre (TMACC - https://knowledge4policy.ec.europa.eu/text-mining/ ), hosted by the Joint Research Centre (JRC), is looking for a Machine Learning expert to reinforce our Natural Language Processing team.
The Unit's day-to-day work involves processing vast amounts of textual data, including legal acts, political speeches, discussion fora, news and social media postings, to the benefit Science-for-Policy projects within the EU Institutions.
The job is based in Ispra, Italy.
An ideal candidate will have a PhD or a minimum of 3 years of professional experience after university, an academic background in Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence or similar, and hands-on experience in developing Text Mining applications.
Contract duration: 36 months initial contract with possible renewals up to maximum 6 years.
The basic monthly salary for Function Group IV (depending on years of experience): 3 555,98 - 6 593,66€. In addition to the basic salary, the candidate may be eligible for various allowances (including expatriation and household allowances). For further information, see: https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:52020XC1211(0…
The JRC has short-term accommodation facilities for newcomers, nearby the its green campus situated close to Lago Maggiore.
The JRC has childcare facilities for children under 4 years old. Children above 4 years can attend the European School of Varese (https://www.eurscva.eu/en/home/ ), for which transport is organised from the surrounding areas.
To apply:
1. Create a profile on one of these two application portals:
a. EPSO Permanent CAST https://epso.europa.eu/en/documents/2240 OR
b. JRC specialised call for researchers https://joint-research-centre.ec.europa.eu/working-us/jobs-jrc/temporary-po…
2. Once you have created your profile via one of the above portals, create your application via: https://recruitment.jrc.ec.europa.eu/?type=AX
The available position appears among the open positions with the following identifiers:
2022-IPR-I3-FGIV-022149
Title: FG IV – IT Project Officer – NLP Scientific Research
https://recruitment.jrc.ec.europa.eu/showprj.php?type=A&id=2439&target=
!! Deadline: 09/01/2023 !!
***************
Semantic Methods for Events and Stories (SEMMES 2023) – Call for Papers
***************
Website: https://anr-kflow.github.io/semmes/
Workshop co-located with the Extended Semantic Web Conference (ESWC)
Submission deadline: March 9th, 2023
Scope
***************
An important part of human history and knowledge is made of events, which can be aggregated and connected to create stories, be they real or fictional. These events as well as the stories created from them can typically be inherently complex, reflect societal or political stances and be perceived differently across the world population. The Semantic Web offers technologies and methods to represent these events and stories, as well as to interpret the knowledge encoded into graphs and use it for different applications, spanning from narrative understanding and generation to fact-checking.
The aim of our workshop on Semantic Methods for Events and Stories (SEMMES) is to offer an opportunity to discuss the challenges related to dealing with events and stories, and how we can use semantic methods to tackle them. We welcome approaches which combine data, methods and technologies coming from the Semantic Web with methods from other fields, including machine learning, narratology or information extraction. This workshop wants to bring together researchers working on complementary topics, in order to foster collaboration and sharing of expertise in the context of events and stories.
Topics
***************
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Ontologies and data models for representing events, event relations, and narratives;
- Event extraction, co-reference and linking;
- Event Relation extraction and linking (e.g. temporal, causal, modal relationships);
- Fake events detection and event verification;
- Event-centric question answering;
- Event information visualisation;
- Event-centric knowledge graphs and vocabularies;
- Completion of event-centric knowledge graphs and reasoning;
- Event summarisation;
- Automatic narrative understanding and generation;
- Storytelling Applications/Demos.
Submission Guidelines
***************
We welcome the following types of contributions.
- Long papers (10-15 pages including references)
- Short papers (5-9 pages including references)
We welcome any types of research, resource and application papers, as well as (short only) demonstration submissions.
Submissions must be written in English and formatted using the template for submissions to CEUR Workshop Proceedings (https://www.overleaf.com/latex/templates/template-for-submissions-to-ceur-w…)
All papers and abstracts have to be submitted electronically via EasyChair: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=semmes2023.
Each accepted paper needs to be presented by one of the authors, who agrees to register and participate in SEMMES.
Important Dates
***************
- Submission deadline: March 9th, 2023
- Notifications: April 13th, 2023
- Camera-ready version: April 20th, 2023
- Workshop day: May 28th or 29th, 2023 (half-day, TBA)
All deadlines are 23:59 anywhere on earth (UTC-12).
Proceedings
***************
The complete set of papers will be published with the CEUR Workshop Proceedings (http://CEUR-WS.org), listed by the DBLP.
--
Pasquale Lisena
EURECOM, Campus SophiaTech
450 route des Chappes, 06410 Biot, France
e-mail: pasquale.lisena(a)eurecom.fr
site: http://pasqlisena.github.io/
[Reminder: Application deadline 10 January 2023]
The GroNLP group is further expanding and we are looking for enthusiastic
assistant professors in any (or related to) the areas of speech and
language technology, artificial intelligence, data science, or
computational social science. Follow the link for more information!
https://www.rug.nl/about-ug/work-with-us/job-opportunities/?details=00347-0…
Please contact prof. Johan Bos <johan.bos(a)rug.nl> to get more information
about these positions! Best regards,
--
Arianna Bisazza
Assistant Professor
University of Groningen
http://www.cs.rug.nl/~bisazza
3rd call for papers: ICLC-10
The Leibniz Institute for the German Language in Mannheim is pleased to announce the 10th International Contrastive Linguistics Conference (ICLC-10). The conference will take place in Mannheim,
Germany, from 18 to 21 July 2023.
The aim of the ICLC conference series, running since 1998, is to encourage fine-grained cross-linguistic research comprising two or more languages from a broad range of theoretical and methodological
perspectives. ICLC brings together researchers from different linguistic subfields (and neighboring disciplines) to continue the (interdisciplinary) dialog on comparing languages, to foster the
development of an international community, to discuss the state of the art, and to advance possible new areas of cross-linguistic research. Contrastive Linguistics as a linguistic subfield has had a
checkered history, but comparative and contrastive work has always been and continues to be an important part of linguistic research. New impulses for comparative and contrastive work include the
increasing availability of multilingual corpora or comparative work drawing on naturalistic interaction data. At this anniversary edition of ICLC, we want to provide a stage for the presentation of
such new work, and reflect the past, current and future developments of contrastive research in linguistics.
We invite contributions addressing (meta)theoretical, methodological or empirical issues, such as (but not limited to) the following:
* Comparison of phenomena in two or more languages addressing topics from any area and level of linguistic analysis, including lexicon, phonetics and phonology, morphology, syntax and morphosyntax,
semantics, pragmatics as well as matters such as register and socio-cultural context
* The state of the art and recent advances in contrastive linguistic research
* The aims, objectives and scope of contrastive linguistic research
* The status of contrastive research within linguistic studies and its relationship with neighbouring or complementary approaches such as historical, typological, micro-variationist, intercultural
and contact linguistics
* The link between contrastive studies and fields of applied linguistics such as foreign language teaching and learning, translation studies and corpus linguistics
* Potentials and limits of theoretical frameworks in relation to contrastive analysis (e.g., functional, cognitive, interactional, generative, constructional approaches)
* Theoretical and theoretical-methodological issues (comparability, incommensurability, the socio-cultural context, tertia comparationis, language universals)
* Empirical and data-related methodological issues (parallel / translation corpora, comparable corpora, learner corpora, multimodal corpora, naturalistic data of face-to-face interaction, psycho- and
neurolinguistic experiments, surveys)
* The significance of the contrastive perspective for language-specific description on the one hand and for cross-linguistic generalizations and the development of linguistic theory on the other hand
Some of these issues will be addressed by five invited keynote speakers.
Keynote speakers are:
* Artemis Alexiadou (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin and Leibniz-Centre for General Linguistics, Germany)
* Jenny Audring (Leiden University, The Netherlands)
* Elwys De Stefani (University of Heidelberg, Germany, and KU Leuven, Belgium)
* Martin Haspelmath (Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Germany)
* Hilde Hasselgård (University of Oslo, Norway)
The conference will include a poster session. The conference language will be English. Following the conference, all participants will be offered the possibility to submit their contribution for
publication in a volume of selected conference papers.
Submission of AbstractsWe invite submissions for 20-minute oral presentations (plus 10 minutes for discussion) or poster presentations. Abstracts should formulate a clear research question and include a description of the
methods, results and conclusions. All submissions will be reviewed anonymously by at least two reviewers.
One person may submit only one (oral or poster) paper as the first author. The number of co-authored submissions is not limited. However, presenting more than one paper (oral or poster) at the
conference by a single person should be avoided.
All submissions must be in English, fully anonymous, and no longer than one page (12 point Times New Roman), with up to one additional page for data, figures and references.
Abstracts must be submitted via the EasyChair system through the following submission web page https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=iclc10
Important Dates * 16.01.2023: Deadline for abstract submission
* 31.03.2023: Notification of acceptance
* 14.04.2023: Confirmation of participation
* 18.07.2023: Arrival, Registration, Get-together
* 19.-21.07.2023: Conference
Conference Web Site
https://iclc10.ids-mannheim.de
Organizing CommitteeBeata Trawinski (Chair)
Marc Kupietz
Kristel Proost
Jörg Zinken
Extended deadline for submission
TAL Journal: regular issue
http://tal-64-1.sciencesconf.org/ <http://tal-64-1.sciencesconf.org/>
2023 Volume 64-1
Deadline for submission: 01/30/2023
Editors : Cécile Fabre, Emmanuel Morin, Sophie Rosset and
Pascale Sébillot
TOPICS
The journal Automatic Language Processing has an open call for papers.
Submissions may concern theoretical and experimental contributions on
all aspects of written, spoken, and signed language processing and
computational linguistics, both theoretical and experimental, for
example:
- Computational models of language
- Linguistic resources
- Statistical learning and modeling
- Intermodality and multimodality
- Language multiplicity and diversity
- Semantics and comprehension
- Information access and text mining
- Language production and processing/generation/synthesis
- Evaluation
- Explicability and reproducibility
- NLP in interaction with other disciplines, digital humanities
This list is indicative. On all topics, it is essential that the
aspects related to natural language processing are emphasized.
We also welcome position papers and survey papers.
LANGUAGE
Manuscripts may be submitted in English or French. Submissions in
English are accepted only if one of the co-authors is a non
French-speaking person.
THE JOURNAL
TAL (http://www.atala.org/revuetal_ <http://www.atala.org/revuetal_> - Traitement Automatique des
Langues / Natural Language Processing) is an international journal
published by ATALA (French Association for Natural Language Processing)
since 1960 with the support of CNRS (National Centre for Scientific
Research). It has moved to an electronic mode of publication.
IMPORTANT DATES
Deadline for submission: 01/30/2023
Notification to authors after first review: 03/30/2023
Notification to authors after second review: 06/15/2023
Publication: October, 2023
FORMAT SUBMISSION
Papers must be between 20 and 25 pages long, including references
and appendices (with no possible derogation on the length).
TAL performs double-blind review: it is thus necessary to anonymise the
manuscript and the name of the pdf file and to avoid self references.
Style sheets are available for download on the Web site of the journal
(https://www.atala.org/content/instruction-authors-style-files-0 <https://www.atala.org/content/instruction-authors-style-files-0>).
Authors who intend to submit a paper are encouraged to upload your
contribution via the menu "Paper submission" (PDF format). To do so,
you will need to have an account on the sciencesconf platform.
To create an account, go to the site _http://www.sciencesconf.org_ <http://www.sciencesconf.org_/>
and click on "create account" next to the "Connect" button at the top
of the page. To submit, come back to the page (soon available)
http://tal-64-1.sciencesconf.org/ <http://tal-64-1.sciencesconf.org/>, connect to you account and upload
your submission.
*The Second Ukrainian Natural Language Processing Workshop (UNLP 2023)*
<https://unlp.org.ua/>
*Call For Papers*
UNLP 2023 <https://unlp.org.ua/call-for-papers/> will be held online in
conjunction with the EACL 2023 conference in May 2023.
The workshop will bring together academics, researchers, and practitioners
in the fields of Natural Language Processing and Computational Linguistics
who work with the Ukrainian language or do cross-Slavic research that can
be applied to the Ukrainian language.
We hope that the workshop will facilitate developments in the processing of
the Ukrainian language, as well as provide a platform for discussion and
sharing of ideas, encourage collaboration between different research
groups, and improve the visibility of the Ukrainian research community.
Topics of interest lie in the area of Ukrainian NLP and Computational
Linguistics and include, but are not limited to, the following tasks:
- morphosyntactic tagging,
- named-entity recognition,
- syntactic and semantic parsing,
- coreference resolution,
- information extraction and text mining,
- automated question answering and information retrieval,
- language modelling and natural language generation,
- grammatical error correction,
- text summarization,
- machine translation,
- sentiment analysis,
- argument mining,
- disinformation detection and fact verification,
- development of language resources and evaluation methods,
- speech recognition and generation,
- knowledge representation and computational pragmatics,
- computational semantics,
- computational methods for phonology,
- cross-Slavic models,
- Ukrainian NLP in interaction with other artificial intelligence
technologies.
*Shared Task*
The Second UNLP features the first *Shared Task in Grammatical Error
Correction for Ukrainian*. The Shared Task focuses on correction of
grammatical errors and disfluencies, and we see this shared task as an
opportunity to facilitate research of GEC for Slavic languages.
You can find more details on the web page of the Shared Task
<https://unlp.org.ua/shared-task/>.
*Important dates*
December 22, 2023 — First call for workshop papers
January 9, 2023 — Second call for workshop papers
February 13, 2023 — Workshop paper due
March 13, 2023 — Notification of acceptance
March 27, 2023 — Camera-ready papers due
May 2 or 6, 2023 — Workshop dates
*Keynote speakers*
Mona Diab <https://www.linkedin.com/in/mona-diab-55946614/>, The George
Washington University, US
Gulnara Muratova <https://www.linkedin.com/in/gulnara-muratova-0206/>,
QIRI`M YOUNG, Ukraine
*Submissions*
The workshop will provide Grammarly Premium to all authors. To request
Grammarly Premium, please submit the form on the website
<https://unlp.org.ua/>.
UNLP invites submissions of completed and ongoing projects. Submissions
describing resources or solutions that have been made available to the
wider public are strongly encouraged. The workshop will also accept papers
with negative results.
We invite two types of submissions: long and short papers. Long papers
should describe original, unpublished and completed work. The short papers
may describe work in progress, small focused contributions, system
demonstrations, new linguistic resources, or experiments based on existing
software and resources.
Overlap with previously published work should be clearly mentioned at the
time of submission. The authors should indicate in their submission whether
the paper has been submitted elsewhere, e.g., to the main conference. In
particular, in case the paper has been rejected by the main conference, it
should be indicated in the submission.
All submissions will be judged on correctness, novelty, technical strength,
clarity of presentation, usability, and significance/relevance to the
Workshop. Every submission will be reviewed by at least three members of
the Program Committee.
Paper review will be blind. The papers must not include the authors’ names
and affiliations. Self-citations and other references that reveal the
authors’ identity must be avoided.
Long papers should follow the two-column format of EACL 2023 proceedings
not exceeding eight (8) pages of content plus two (2) pages for references.
Short paper submissions should follow the same format, and should not
exceed five (5) pages for content plus two (2) pages for references.
All submissions must conform to the official style guidelines of EACL 2023
<https://unlp.org.ua/call-for-papers/#:~:text=style%20guidelines%20of%20EACL…>
contained in the style files and must be in PDF. Camera-ready versions of
accepted papers must be provided both in LaTeX and PDF format.
*Workshop Organizers*
Andrii Hlybovets, National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, Ukraine
Oleksii Ignatenko, Ukrainian Catholic University, Ukraine
Oleksii Molchanovskii, Ukrainian Catholic University, Ukraine
Mariana Romanyshyn, Grammarly, Ukraine
*Program Committee*
Andrii Babii, Kharkiv National University of Radio Electronics, Ukraine
Andrii Liubonko, Grammarly, Ukraine
Anna Rogers, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
Artem Chernodub, Grammarly, Ukraine
Bogdan Babych, Heidelberg University, Germany
Bogdana Oliynyk, National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, Ukraine
Bohdan Kolchygin, Shelf, Ukraine
Dmytro Karamshuk, Meta, UK
Dmytro Sytnyk, Institute of Mathematics NAS, Ukraine
Galyna Kriukova, National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, Ukraine
Igor Samokhin, Grammarly, Ukraine
Iuliia Makogon, Semantrum, Ukraine
Julia Rogushina, Institute of Software Systems NAS, Ukraine
Kostiantyn Omelianchuk, Grammarly, Ukraine
Maksym Tarnavskyi, Shelf, Poland
Mariana Romanyshyn, Grammarly, Ukraine
Natalia Grabar, CNRS, Université de Lille, France
Natalia Kocyba, Samsung Research Poland, Poland
Nataliia Cheilytko, Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Germany
Oleksandr Marchenko, Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, Ukraine
Oleksandr Skurzhanskyi, Grammarly, Ukraine
Olena Siruk, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria
Olga Kanishcheva, Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Germany
Ruslan Chorney, National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, Ukraine
Serhii Havrylov, University of Edinburgh, UK
Svitlana Galeshchuk, Université Paris Dauphine, BNP Paribas, France
Taras Lehinevych, Amazon, Ireland
Taras Shevchenko, Proxet (Giphy project), Ukraine
Tatjana Scheffler, Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany
Thierry Hamon, Université Paris-Saclay, CNRS, LIMSI & Université Sorbonne,
France
Veronika Solopova, FU Berlin, Germany
Volodymyr Taranukha, Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, Ukraine
Vsevolod Dyomkin, Projector, Ukraine
Yevhen Kupriianov, National Technical University “Kharkiv Polytechnic
Institute”, Ukraine
*Contact*
Email: info(a)unlp.org.ua.
Website: https://unlp.org.ua/.
Twitter: https://twitter.com/UNLP_workshop.
Telegram: https://t.me/UNLP_workshop.
*** Apologies for cross-posting ***
Call for Papers: Semantics-enabled Biomedical Literature Analytics
This Special Issue aims to highlight the development of novel informatics
methods for *retrieval, indexing, and analysis of biomedical literature,
focusing on semantics-based techniques*. We invite researchers working in
biomedical informatics, knowledge representation/ontologies, information
retrieval, natural language processing, artificial intelligence/machine
learning, data mining, and other related areas to submit clear and detailed
descriptions of their novel methodological results.
The topics of interest include but are not limited to:
- Knowledge representation and semantics for biomedical literature
retrieval
- Biomedical ontologies in search
- Biomedical knowledge source integration
- Biomedical knowledge graph construction and embeddings
- Knowledge graphs in biomedical search
- Semantic knowledge in biomedical literature classification and ranking
- Biomedical information extraction
- Entity linking and semantic annotation in biomedical texts
- Literature-based knowledge discovery
- Semantics for biomedical knowledge synthesis and systematic literature
review
All submitted papers must be original and will go through a rigorous
peer-review process with at least two reviewers. Papers previously
published in conference proceedings will not be considered. JBI’s
editorial policy will be strictly followed by special issue reviewers. Note
in particular that JBI emphasizes the publication of papers that introduce
innovative and generalizable methods of interest to the informatics
community. Specific applications can be described to motivate the
methodology being introduced, but papers that focus solely on a specific
application are not suitable for JBI.
*Submission Guidelines*
Authors must submit their papers via the online Editorial Manager (EES) at
<http://ees.elsevier.com/jbi>https://www.editorialmanager.com/jbi
<https://ees.elsevier.com/jbi>. Authors should select “Semantics-enabled
Biomedical Literature Analytics” as their submission category and note in a
cover letter that their submission is for the “*Special Issue on
Semantics-enabled Biomedical Literature Analytics.*” If the manuscript is
not intended as an original research paper, the cover letter should also
specify if it is, rather, a *Methodological Review, Commentary, or Special
Communication*. Authors should make sure to place their work in the context
of human-focused biomedical research or health care, and to review
carefully the relevant literature.
JBI’s editorial policy, and the types of articles that the journal
publishes, are outlined under *Aims and Scope *on the journal home page at
https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/journal-of-biomedical-informatics
<https://www.journals.elsevier.com/journal-of-biomedical-informatics>(click
on “View full Aims and Scope” for details). All submissions should follow
the guidelines for authors at
<https://www.elsevier.com/journals/journal-ofbiomedical-%20informatics/1532-…>*https://www.elsevier.com/journals/journal-ofbiomedical-
informatics/1532-0464/guide-for-authors
<https://www.elsevier.com/journals/journal-ofbiomedical-%20informatics/1532-…>*,
including format and manuscript structure.
*Important Dates*
Deadline for submissions: January 15, 2023
First-round review decisions: March 15, 2023
Deadline for revision submissions: April 15, 2023
Notification of final decisions: June 15, 2023
The full Call for Papers is available at
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbi.2022.104134. Please direct any questions
regarding the special issue to Dr. Halil Kilicoglu (halil(a)illinois.edu).
*Guest Editors:*
Halil Kilicoglu (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, halil(a)illinois.edu
)
Faezeh Ensan (Ryerson University, fensan(a)ryerson.ca)
Bridget McInnes (Virginia Commonwealth University, bmtinnes(a)vcu.edu)
Lucy Lu Wang (University of Washington/Allen Institute for AI, lucylw(a)uw.edu
)
*HALIL KILICOGLU*
*Associate Professor*
School of Information Sciences
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
halil(a)illinois.edu
https://ischool.illinois.edu/people/halil-kilicoglu