9th Symposium on Corpus Approaches to Lexicogrammar (LxGr2024)
CALL FOR PAPERS
Deadline for abstract submission: Friday 15 March 2024
The symposium will take place online on Friday 5 and Saturday 6 July 2024.
Invited Speakers
Lise Fontaine<http://www.uqtr.ca/PagePerso/Lise.Fontaine> (Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières): Reconciling (or not) lexis and grammar
Ute Römer-Barron<http://alsl.gsu.edu/profile/ute-romer> (Georgia State University): Phraseology research in second language acquisition
LxGr primarily welcomes papers reporting on corpus-based research on any aspect of the interaction of lexis and grammar - particularly studies that interrogate the system lexicogrammatically to get lexicogrammatical answers. However, position papers discussing theoretical or methodological issues are also welcome, as long as they are relevant to both lexicogrammar and corpus linguistics.
If you would like to present, send an abstract of 500 words (excluding references) to lxgr(a)edgehill.ac.uk<mailto:lxgr@edgehill.ac.uk>.
Abstracts for research papers should specify the research focus (research questions or hypotheses), the corpus, the methodology (techniques, metrics), the theoretical orientation, and the main findings. Abstracts for position papers should specify the theoretical orientation and the potential contribution to both lexicogrammar and corpus linguistics.
Abstracts will be double-blind reviewed by members of the Programme Committee<https://sites.edgehill.ac.uk/lxgr/committee>.
Full papers will be allocated 35 minutes (including 10 minutes for discussion).
Work-in-progress reports will be allocated 20 minutes (including 5 minutes for discussion).
There will be no parallel sessions.
Participation is free.
For details, visit the LxGr website: https://sites.edgehill.ac.uk/lxgr/lxgr2024
If you have any questions, contact lxgr(a)edgehill.ac.uk<mailto:lxgr@edgehill.ac.uk>.
________________________________
Edge Hill University<http://ehu.ac.uk/home/emailfooter>
Modern University of the Year, The Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2022<http://ehu.ac.uk/tef/emailfooter>
University of the Year, Educate North 2021/21
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First Workshop on Patient-Oriented Language Processing (CL4HEALTH) @ LREC-COLING 2024
https://bionlp.nlm.nih.gov/cl4health2024/
Torino, Italy (co-located with LREC-COLING 2024)
May 20, 2024
SCOPE
This first workshop on patient-oriented language processing aims to establish a general venue for presenting research and applications focused on patients’ needs, including summarizing health records for the patients, answering consumer-health questions using reliable resources, detecting misinformation or potentially harmful information, and providing multi-modal information, such as video, if it better satisfies patients’ needs. Such a venue is needed both to invigorate patient-oriented language processing research and to build a community of researchers interested in this area. The growing interest in this topic is fueled by several current trends:
- a proliferation of online services that target patients but do not always act in their best interests
- policy changes that allow patients to access their health records written in the professional vernacular, which may confuse the patients or lead to misinterpretation;
- replacement of customer services with chat bots; and
- the increasing tendency of patients to consult online resources as a second or even first opinion on their health problems.
We invite papers concerning all areas of language processing focused on patients’ health. The workshop will be centered on language technologies for health-related issues concerning the public that include, but are not limited to:
- accessibility and trustworthiness of health information provided to the public
- explainable and evidence-supported answers to consumer-health questions
- accurate summarization of patients’ health records at their health-literacy level
- understanding patients' non-informational needs through their language, and accurate and accessible interpretations of biomedical research
Broadly, CL4Health is concerned with the resources, computational approaches, and behavioral and socio-economic aspects of the public interactions with digital resources in search of health-related information that satisfies their information needs and guides their actions.
The topics of interest for the workshop include but are not limited to the following:
- Health-related information needs and online behaviors of the public
- Quality assurance and ethics considerations in language technologies and approaches applied to text and other modalities for public consumption
- Summarization of EHR data for patients
- Detection of misinformation in health-related resources and mitigation of potential harms
- Consumer-health question answering
- Biomedical text simplification/adaptation
- Dialogue systems to support patients’ interactions with clinicians, healthcare systems, and online resources
- Linguistic resources, data and tools for language technologies focusing on consumer health
- Resources, strategies and metrics for system testing and evaluation
- Infrastructures and pre-trained language models for consumer health
- Processing and annotation platforms
- Synthetic data generation and data augmentation.
IMPORTANT DATES
March 15, 2024 - Paper submissions due
March 25, 2024 - Notification of acceptance
March 31, 2024 - Camera-ready papers due
May 20, 2024 - Workshop @ LREC-COLING
SUBMISSIONS
Two types of submissions are invited:
- Full papers: should not exceed eight (8) pages of text, plus unlimited references. These are intended to be reports of original research.
- Short papers: may consist of up to four (4) pages of content, plus unlimited references. Appropriate short paper topics include preliminary results, application notes, descriptions of work in progress, etc.
Electronic Submission: Submissions must be electronic and in PDF format, using the Softconf START conference management system. Submissions need to be anonymous.
Submission site: https://softconf.com/lrec-coling2024/cl4health2024/
Dual submission policy: papers may NOT be submitted to the workshop if they are or will be concurrently submitted to another meeting or publication.
Main conference resubmissions: We welcome submissions of topically-relevant papers that have been rejected from the main LREC-COLING conference. The scores and reviews from the main conference will be taken into consideration, and the highest ranking papers may be considered without additional review. Please ensure that you paste the original review and scores within the indicated text box on the submission page.
INVITED TALKS
- Barbara Di Eugenio, University of Illinois Chicago
- Abeed Sarker, Associate Professor and Vice Chair for Research in Biomedical Informatics @ Emory School of Medicine
- Natalia Grabar, CNRS Researcher, Université de Lille
ORGANIZERS
- Dina Demner-Fushman, US National Library of Medicine
- Sophia Ananiadou, National Centre for Text Mining and University of Manchester, UK
- Paul Thompson, National Centre for Text Mining and University of Manchester, UK
- Brian Ondov, US National Library of Medicine
PROGRAMME COMMITTEE
- Sophia Ananiadou, National Centre for Text Mining and University of Manchester, UK
- Luiz Henrique Bonifacio, University of Waterloo, Canada
- Leonardo Campillos-Llanos, Spanish National Research Council, Spain
- Dina Demner-Fushman, National Library of Medicine, USA
- Manas Gaur, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, USA
- Natalia Grabar, Université de Lille, France
- Cyril Grouin, Université de Paris-Saclay, CNRS, LISN, Orsay, France
- Tudor Groza, Curtin University, Australia
- Deepak Gupta, National Library of Medicine, USA
- Anna Koroleva, Springbok AI, UK
- Alberto Lavelli, Fondazione Bruno Kessler, Italy
- Aurélie Névéol, Université de Paris-Saclay, CNRS, LISN, Orsay, France
- Brian Ondov, National Library of Medicine, USA
- Anthony Rios, University of Texas at San Antonio, USA
- Miguel Rocha, University of Minho, Portugal
- Roland Roller, German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI) Germany
- Abeed Sarker, Emory School of Medicine, USA
- Paul Thompson, National Centre for Text Mining and University of Manchester, UK
- Amelie Wührl, University of Stuttgart, Germany
- Pierre Zweigenbaum, Université de Paris-Saclay, CNRS, LISN, Orsay, France
--
Paul Thompson
Research Fellow
Department of Computer Science
National Centre for Text Mining
Manchester Institute of Biotechnology
University of Manchester
131 Princess Street
Manchester
M1 7DN
UK
Tel: 0161 306 3091
http://personalpages.manchester.ac.uk/staff/Paul.Thompson/
The Computation, Cognition and Language group at Idiap in Martigny
(Switzerland) invites applications for a 4-year funded PhD position that
aims to investigate how new terms emerge and how they spread in
different contexts, thereby comparing Western societies with
hunter-gatherer societies.
RESEARCH ENVIRONMENT:
The position will be part of the National Centre of Competence in
Research (NCCR) Evolving Language www.evolvinglanguage.ch, a Swiss
consortium with the ambitious goal of creating a new discipline,
Evolutionary Language Science, that targets the past and future of
language. The consortium consists of leading scientists from
traditionally separated academic domains, which allows us to harvest the
diverse expertise from the humanities, social sciences, computational
sciences, natural sciences and medicine towards a broadscale
interdisciplinary collaboration. Within this framework we offer a
position in an interdisciplinary team of computational linguists and
evolutionary anthropologists from the Idiap research institute and the
University of Zurich (UZH). The candidate can be registered at the UZH
or the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) pending admission
to a doctoral school.
The expected start date is between 1 June and 1 Sep 2024.
For more information, please contact lonneke.vanderplas(a)idiap.ch.
Applications are to be made at
https://www.idiap.ch/en/join-us/job-opportunities. Please submit your
application by March 10 to ensure full consideration.
SOUGHT PROFILE:
You should hold, or expect to obtain before the start of your
appointment, a Master’s degree (or equivalent) with a background in
computational linguistics, evolutionary anthropology, computer science,
communication systems, mathematics, and/or related fields. The ideal
candidate combines an interest and expertise both in computational
linguistics and evolutionary biology, but because this is a very rare
profile, we are also strongly encouraging applications from candidates
with expertise in one and interest in the other field. Either way, you
should have a strong interest in pursuing fundamental research on
language evolution. You should be proficient in spoken and written
English. Proficiency in or willingness to learn additional languages is
a plus.
The candidate will be located at Idiap, in the Computation, Cognition,
and Language Group under the supervision of Prof. Lonneke van der Plas
(natural language processing) at Idiap, pending budgetary approval. They
will be co-supervised by Prof. Andrea Migliano (evolutionary
anthropology) at UZH, and Prof. Lena Jäger (computational linguistics)
at UZH. (Virtual) participation in lab meetings both at Idiap and UZH is
expected. Furthermore, some fieldwork in Congo or Australia is to be
expected.
We take gender balance and diversity seriously in our hiring decisions.
Best, Lonneke
--
Prof. Lonneke van der Plas
Head of Computation, Cognition & Language Group, and Assoc. Prof. (UM, affil.)
Idiap, Martigny, Switzerland
Tel: +41 277217739
*******************************************************
EAMT 2024: The 25th Annual Conference of
The European Association for Machine Translation
24 - 27 June 2024
Sheffield, UK
https://eamt2024.sheffield.ac.uk/
@eamt_2024 (X account)
Keynote speaker: Alexandra Birch (University of Edinburgh, UK)
EXTENDED Tutorial proposal deadline: 15 March 2024
Tutorial date: 27 June 2024
More information:
https://eamt2024.sheffield.ac.uk/conference-calls/call-for-tutorials
*******************************************************
*** Overview ***
The European Association for Machine Translation (EAMT) invites proposals
for tutorials to be held in conjunction with the EAMT 2024 conference
taking place in Sheffield, UK, from 24 to 27 June, with tutorials held on
27 June. We seek proposals in all areas of machine translation (see the
call for papers of the main conference for the focus areas of EAMT 2024).
The aim of a tutorial is primarily to help the audience develop an
understanding of particular technical, applied, and business matters
related to research, development, and use of MT and translation technology.
Presentations of particular technological solutions or systems are welcome,
provided that they serve as illustrations of broader scientific
considerations.
We recommend that the tutorial covers work by the presenters as well as by
other researchers. The submission should explain that this breadth is
ensured. Tutorials should not be “self-invited talks”.
*** Submission Details ***
Proposals should not exceed 4 pages of content (plus unlimited pages for
references), should be in PDF format, and should contain the following:
- A title and authors, affiliations, and contact information.
- A brief description of the tutorial content and its relevance to the
machine translation community.
- Short description of the target audience and any expected prerequisite
background the audience should be aware of.
- An outline of the tutorial structure content and how it will be covered
in a three-hour slot (half-day). In exceptional cases, six-hour tutorial
slots (full day) are available. These time limits do not include coffee
breaks, e.g., a three-hour tutorial, in fact, occupies a 3.5-hour slot, and
a six-hour tutorial occupies a 7-hour slot.
- Diversity considerations, e.g. use of multilingual data, indications of
how the described methods scale up to various languages or domains,
participation of both senior and junior instructors, demographic and
geographical diversity of the instructors, plans for how to diversify
audience participation, etc.
- Reading list. Work that you expect the audience to read before the
tutorial can be indicated by an asterisk. Recommended papers should provide
the breadth of authorship and include work by other authors, and work from
other disciplines is welcome if relevant.
- For each tutorial presenter, a one-paragraph statement of their research
interests and areas of expertise for the tutorial topic, as well as
experience in instructing an international audience.
An estimate of the audience size for the tutorial. If the same or a similar
tutorial has been given before, include information on where any previous
version of the tutorial was given and how many attendees the tutorial
attracted.
- A description of special requirements for technical equipment.
Tutorial proposals should be submitted as PDF files to OpenReview:
https://openreview.net/group?id=EAMT.org/2024/Tutorials_Track.
Submissions should be formatted according to the templates specified below.
Anonymisation is not required. Submissions should be no longer than 4 pages
(excluding references).
*** Templates for writing your proposal ***
There templates available in the following formats (check our website --
https://eamt2024.sheffield.ac.uk/conference-calls/call-for-papers):
- LaTeX
- Cloneable Overleaf template
- Word
- Libre Office/Open Office
- PDF
*** Evaluation Criteria ***
Each tutorial proposal will be evaluated according to its clarity and
preparedness, novelty or timely character of the topic, and instructors’
experience.
** Tutorial Instructor Responsibilities ***
Accepted tutorial presenters will be notified by 15 April 2024. They must
then provide abstracts of their tutorials for inclusion in the conference
registration material by the specific conference deadlines. The description
should be in two formats: (a) an ASCII version that can be included in
email announcements and published on the conference website, and (b) a PDF
version for inclusion in the electronic proceedings (detailed instructions
will be provided). Tutorial speakers must provide tutorial materials by 15
May 2024. The final submitted tutorial materials must minimally include
copies of the course slides and a bibliography for the material covered in
the tutorial.
For each tutorial being held at EAMT 2024, we offer free registration to
the conference for one tutor only.
*** Important Dates ***
- Submission deadline for tutorial proposals (extended): 15 March 2024
- Notification of acceptance (extended): 15 April 2024
- Tutorial slides + abstract + bibliography + any other materials: 15 May
2024
All deadlines are at 23:59 CEST.
*** Workshop Co-Chairs ***
Mary Nurminen (Tampere University)
Diptesh Kanojia (University of Surrey)
*** Local organising committee ***
Carolina Scarton (University of Sheffield)
Charlotte Prescott (ZOO Digital)
Chris Bayliss (ZOO Digital)
Chris Oakley (ZOO Digital)
Xingyi Song (University of Sheffield)
*** Sponsors ***
Silver: Translated <https://translated.com/welcome>, Unbabel
<https://unbabel.com/>
Bronze: Pangeanic <https://pangeanic.com/>, STAR
<https://www.star-group.net/en/home.html>, Transperfect
<https://globallink.transperfect.com/>
Collaborator: Apertium <https://apertium.org/>
Supporter: Spring Nature <https://www.springernature.com/gp>
--
*Carolina Scarton*
Lecturer in Natural Language Processing
Department of Computer Science
University of Sheffield
http://staffwww.dcs.shef.ac.uk/people/C.Scarton/
*******************************************************
EAMT 2024: The 25th Annual Conference of
The European Association for Machine Translation
24 - 27 June 2024
Sheffield, UK
https://eamt2024.sheffield.ac.uk/https://twitter.com/eamt_2024 (X account)
Keynote speaker: Alexandra Birch (University of Edinburgh, UK)
EXTENDED Paper submission deadline: 15 March 2024
More information:
https://eamt2024.sheffield.ac.uk/conference-calls/call-for-papers
*******************************************************
The European Association for Machine Translation (EAMT) invites everyone
interested in machine translation (MT) and translation-related tools and
resources ― developers, researchers, users, translation and localization
professionals and managers ― to participate in this conference.
Driven by the state of the art, the research community will demonstrate
their cutting-edge research and results. Professional MTusers will provide
insights into successful MT implementation of MT in business scenarios as
well as implementation scenarios involving large corporations, governments,
or NGOs. Translation scholars and translation practitioners are also
invited to share their first-hand MT experience, which will be addressed
during a special track.
Note that papers that have been archived in arXiv can be accepted for
submission provided that they have not already been published elsewhere.
EAMT 2024 has four tracks, namely Research: Technical, Research:
Translators & Users, Implementations & Case Studies, and Products &
Projects.
*** Research: technical ***
Submissions (up to 10 pages, plus unlimited pages for references and
appendices) are invited for reports of significant research results in any
aspect of MT and related areas. Such reports should include a substantial
evaluation component, or have a strong theoretical and/or methodological
contribution where results and in-depth evaluations may not be appropriate.
Papers are welcome on all topics in the areas of MT and translation-related
technologies, including, but not limited to:
- Deep-learning approaches for MT and MT evaluation
- Advances in classical MT paradigms: statistical, rule-based, and hybrid
approaches
- Comparison of various MT approaches
- Technologies for MT deployment: quality estimation, domain adaptation,
etc.
- Resources and evaluation
- MT in special settings: low resources, massive resources, high volume,
low computing resources
- MT applications: translation/localization aids, speech translation,
multimodal MT, MT for user generated content (blogs, social networks), MT
in computer-aided language learning, etc.
- Linguistic resources for MT: corpora, terminologies, dictionaries, etc.
- MT evaluation techniques, metrics, and evaluation results
- Human factors in MT and user interfaces
- Related multilingual technologies: natural language generation,
information retrieval, text categorization, text summarization, information
extraction, optical character recognition, etc.
Papers should describe original work. They should emphasise completed work
rather than intended work, and should indicate clearly the state of
completion of the reported results. Where appropriate, concrete evaluation
results should be included.
Papers should be anonymized, prepared according to the templates specified
below, and be no longer than 10 pages (plus unlimited pages for references
and appendices). Submit the paper as a PDF to OpenReview:
https://openreview.net/group?id=EAMT.org/2024/Technical_Track. Submissions
that do not conform to the required styles may be rejected without review.
**Track co-chairs
Rachel Bawden (Inria, Paris)
Víctor M Sánchez-Cartagena (University of Alicant)
*** Research: translators & users ***
Submissions (up to 10 pages, plus unlimited pages for references and
appendices) are invited for academic research on all topics related to how
professional translators and other types of MT users interact with, are
affected by, or conceptualise MT. Papers should report significant research
results with a strong theoretical and/or methodological contribution.
Topics for the track include, but are not limited to:
- The impact of MT and post-editing: including studies on processes,
effort, strategies, usability, productivity, pricing, workflows, and
post-editese
- Human factors and psycho-social aspects of MT adoption (ergonomics,
motivation, and social impact on the profession, relationship between user
profiles and MT adoption)
- Emerging areas for MT & post-editing: e.g. audiovisual, game
localisation, literary texts, creative texts, social media, health care
communication, crisis translation
- MT and ethics
- The impact of using translators’ metadata and user activity data for
monitoring their work
- The evaluation and reception of different modalities of translation:
human translation, post-edited, raw MT
- MT and interpreting
- Human evaluations of MT output
- MT for gisting and the impact of MT on users: use cases, expectations,
perceptions, trust, views on acceptability
- MT and usability
- MT and education/language learning
- MT in the translation/interpreting classroom
Papers should describe original work. They should emphasise completed work
rather than intended work, and should indicate clearly the state of
completion of the reported results.
Papers should be anonymized, prepared according to the templates specified
below, and be no longer than 10 pages (plus unlimited pages for references
and appendices). Submit the paper as a PDF to OpenReview:
https://openreview.net/group?id=EAMT.org/2024/Research_Translators_Users_Tr….
Submissions that do not conform to the required styles may be rejected
without review.
** Track co-chairs
Patrick Cadwell (DCU)
Ekaterina Lapshinova-Koltunski (University of Hildesheim)
*** Implementations & case studies ***
Submissions (approximately 4–6 pages) are invited for reports on case
studies and implementation experience with MT in organisations of all
types, including small businesses, large corporations, governments, NGOs,
or language service providers. We also invite translation practitioners to
share their views and observations based on their day-to-day experience
working with MT in a variety of environments.
Topics for the track include, but are not limited to:
- Integrating or optimising MT and computer-assisted translation in
translation production workflows (translation memory/MT thresholds, mixing
online and offline tools, using interactive MT, dealing with MT confidence
scores)
- Managing change when implementing and using MT (e.g. switching between
multiple MT systems, limiting degradations when updating or upgrading an MT
system)
- Implementing open-source MT (e.g. strategies to get support, reports on
taking pilot results into full deployment, examples of advanced
customization sought and obtained thanks to the open-source paradigm,
collaboration within open-source MT projects)
- Evaluating MT in a real-world setting (e.g. error detection strategies
employed, metrics used, productivity or translation quality gains achieved)
- Ethical and confidentiality issues when using MT, especially MT in the
cloud
- Using MT in social networking or real-time communication (e.g. enterprise
support chat, multilingual content for social media)
- MT and usability
- Implementing MT to process multilingual content for assimilation purposes
(e.g. cross-lingual information retrieval, MT for e-discovery or spam
detection, MT for highly dynamic content)
- MT in literary, audiovisual, game localization and creative texts
- Impact of MT and post-editing on translation practices and the
profession: processes, effort, compensation,
- Psycho-social aspects of MT adoption (ergonomics, motivation, and social
impact on the profession)
- Error analysis and post-editing strategies (including automatic
post-editing and automation strategies)
- The use of translators’ metadata and user activity data in MT development
- Freelance translators’ independent use of MT
- MT and interpreting
Papers should highlight real-world use scenarios, solutions, and problems
in addition to describing MT integration processes and project settings.
Where solutions do not seem to exist, suggestions for MT researchers and
developers should be clearly emphasized. For papers on implementations and
case studies produced by academics, we require co-authorship with the
actual organizations working with MT implementations.
Papers (approximately 4–6 pages, with a maximum of 10 pages -- plus
unlimited pages for references) should be formatted according to the
templates specified below and submitted as PDF files to Open Review:
https://openreview.net/group?id=EAMT.org/2024/Implementations_Case_Studies_….
Anonymization is not required in the Implementations & Case Studies track
submissions. Submissions that do not conform to the required styles may be
rejected without review.
** Track co-chairs
Vera Cabarrão (Unbabel)
Konstantinos Chatzitheodorou (Strategic Agenda)
*** Products & Projects ***
Submissions (2 pages, including references) are invited on either of the
subtracks (Products or Projects).
- Products: Tools for MT, computer-aided translation, and other translation
technologies (including commercial products and free/open-source
software). Descriptions should include information about product
availability and licensing, an indication of cost if applicable, basic
functionality, (optionally) a comparison with other products, and a
description of the technologies used. The authors should be ready to
present the tools in the form of demos or posters during the conference.
- Projects: Research projects, funded through grants obtained in
competitive public or private calls related to MT. Descriptions should
contain: project title and acronym, funding agency, project reference,
duration, list of partner institutions or companies in the consortium if
there is one, project objectives, and a summary of partial results
available or final results if the project has ended. The authors should be
ready to present the projects in the form of posters during the conference.
This follows on from the successful ‘project villages’ held at the last
EAMT conferences.
There will be a poster boaster session for this track, in which authors
will have 120 seconds to attract attendees to their posters or demos with a
two-slide presentation.
Submissions should be formatted according to the templates specified
below. Anonymization is not required. Submissions should be no longer than
2 pages (including references), and submitted as PDF files to OpenReview:
https://openreview.net/group?id=EAMT.org/2024/Products_Projects_Track.
Track chairs
Helena Moniz (University of Lisbon (FLUL), INESC-ID)
Mikel Forcada (University of Alicant)
*** Templates for writing your proposal ***
There templates available in the following formats (check our website --
https://eamt2024.sheffield.ac.uk/conference-calls/call-for-papers):
- LaTeX
- Cloneable Overleaf template
- Word
- Libre Office/Open Office
- PDF
*** Important deadlines ***
- Deadline for paper submission (extended): 15 March 2024
- Notification to authors (extended): 15 April 2024
- Camera ready deadline (extended): 29 April 2024
- Author Registration: 8 May 2024
All deadlines are at 23:59 CEST.
*** Local organising committee ***
Carolina Scarton (University of Sheffield)
Charlotte Prescott (ZOO Digital)
Chris Bayliss (ZOO Digital)
Chris Oakley (ZOO Digital)
Xingyi Song (University of Sheffield)
*** Sponsors ***
Silver: Translated <https://translated.com/welcome>, Unbabel
<https://unbabel.com/>
Bronze: Pangeanic <https://pangeanic.com/>, STAR
<https://www.star-group.net/en/home.html>, Transperfect
<https://globallink.transperfect.com/>
Collaborator: Apertium <https://apertium.org/>
Supporter: Spring Nature <https://www.springernature.com/gp>
--
*Carolina Scarton*
Lecturer in Natural Language Processing
Department of Computer Science
University of Sheffield
http://staffwww.dcs.shef.ac.uk/people/C.Scarton/
[Apologies for cross-postings]
2nd CfP LEGAL 2024
Legal and Ethical Issues in Human Language Technologies
Workshop at LREC-COLING 2024, Turin, Italy
https://legal2024.mobileds.de/
May 20, 2024
About the Workshop
2023 is likely to be remembered as a year dominated by discussions about
Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Large Language Models (LLM). These
technologies require data to be collected and utilized in unprecedented
amounts. Large sets of Language data are owned by stakeholders that are
not necessarily involved in the development of such technologies. To use
these sets for AI and LLM, it is essential to repackage and repurpose
them for such endeavor. Language data, despite their intangible nature,
are often subject to legal constraints which need to be addressed in
order to guarantee lawful access to and re-use of these data. In recent
years, considerable efforts have been made to adapt legal frameworks to
the advancements in technology while taking into account the interests
of various stakeholders. From the technological perspective, the strict
consideration of legal aspects imposes further questions besides pure
recording technology and participant consent. This arises in several key
elements:
- What is the Intellectual Proprietary status of Large Language sets,
the corresponding Large Language Models, and their potential outputs?
- How can identifying information used in deep learning be removed or
anonymized (and is this mandatory), how reliable are predictions/ models
based on anonymized data?
- Which impact does this have on the usability, computational costs?
The purpose of this full-day workshop is to build bridges between
technology and legal framework, and discuss current legal and ethical
issues in the human language technology sector.
Important Dates
Submission Deadline: March 4, 2024
Notification of Acceptance: March 30, 2024
Camera ready: April 5, 2024
Workshop Day: May 20, 2024
Topics
- Impact of statutory exceptions on text and speech data mining
practices in the field of Human Language Technologies.
- Impact of the regulatory environment at the international level (e.g.
EU Data Act, Digital Governance Act, Digital Services Act, AI Act; the
Chinese “2023 draft rules on generative AI”, the USA Blueprint for an AI
Bill of Rights and other international or national regulations) on the
circulation and use of language data.
- Legal issues related to the production and use of Large Language
Models (Intellectual Property, Data Governance and Data Protection
aspects).
- Concrete applications as to how language technologies can help resolve
legal issues related to data collection, data sharing and data reuse.
- Ethical considerations related to personal data collection and re-use
- Trust and transparency in language and speech technologies
- Efficient anonymization techniques, and the related responsibility,
and their impact on usability and performance
- Re-identification issues/De-anonymization approaches and techniques
- Harmonizing differing perspectives of data scientists and legal
experts, worldwide
Submission
1500-2000 words extended abstracts are needed at first for submission.
The full papers will be published as workshop proceedings along with the
LREC-COLING main conference. For these, the instructions of the main
conference need to be followed @ https://lrec-coling-2024.org/authors-kit/
START Submission Page: https://softconf.com/lrec-coling2024/legal2024/
Identify, Describe and Share your LRs!
When submitting a paper from the START page, authors will be asked to
provide essential information about resources (in a broad sense, i.e.
also technologies, standards, evaluation kits, etc.) that have been used
for the work described in the paper or are a new result of your
research. Moreover, ELRA encourages all LREC-COLING authors to share the
described LRs (data, tools, services, etc.) to enable their reuse and
replicability of experiments (including evaluation ones).
Organizers
Ingo Siegert, OvG University Magdeburg (Germany)
Khalid Choukri, ELRA/ELDA (France)
Pawel Kamocki, IDS Mannheim (Germany)
Kossay Talmoudi, ELDA (France)
====
SEMANTiCS - 20th International Conference on Semantic Systems
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Call for Workshops and Tutorials
September 17 - 19, 2024
https://2024-eu.semantics.cc/page/cfp_ws
====
SEMANTiCS 2024 is a major venue for research and industrial innovation
and features a workshop and tutorial program addressing the diverse
practical interests of its audience. This program is intended to offer a
rich diversity of topics to conference attendees and local participants
seeking to pick up new skills and stay up-to-date regarding the latest
developments in the community. We encourage submissions of proposals on
all topics in the general areas of SEMANTiCS 2024 and proposals bridging
or introducing new perspectives and/or challenges in these areas.
Workshops and tutorials may incorporate panel discussions, lightning
talks, meetings, networking or hands-on sessions, hackathons and other
practical formats where applicable. Rooms for business or project
meetings are available upon request as well.
=Important Dates=
Important Dates for Workshops
* Proposals WS Deadline: March 22, 2024 (11:59 pm, AoE)
* Notification of Acceptance: March 29, 2024 (11:59 pm, AoE)
* Workshop website is online: April 15th, 2024
Suggested Dates for Workshop Organizers (with Call for Papers)
* Submission WS papers Deadline: June 14, 2024 (11:59 pm, AoE)
* Notification of Acceptance: July 05, 2024 (11:59 pm, AoE)
Important Dates for Tutorials (and other meetings, e.g. seminars,
show-cases, etc., without call for papers)
* Proposals Tutorial Deadline: June 11, 2024 (11:59 pm, AoE)
* Notification of Acceptance: June 18, 2024 (11:59 pm, AoE)
Submission via Easychair on https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=sem24
=Scope & Goals=
Workshops and tutorials at SEMANTiCS 2024 allow your organisation or
project to advance and promote your topics and gain increased
visibility. The workshops and tutorials will be announced on the
SEMANTiCS website and they will be seen by all participants. SEMANTiCS
2024 workshops and tutorials can be incubators for industrial and
scientific communities that form and share a particular research and
development agenda and they will provide a forum for presenting
contributions and findings to a diverse and knowledgeable community.
Furthermore, the event can be used as a dissemination activity in the
scope of large research projects or as a closed format for
research/commercial project consortia meetings.
=Proceedings=
For the proceedings, we offer two options:
Option A: In case you want to maintain an already existing series or
want to have one of your own, please organize the proceedings yourself.
Option B: In case you do not have enough contributions/page volume to
create proceedings of your own, we offer to publish your papers as part
of the SEMANTiCS side event proceedings. Side events proceedings will
include posters & demos and (optional) contributions from workshops.
In case you want to make use of Option B, please get in touch with the
workshop & tutorial chairs or drop us a note via Easychair.
=Setup and Requirements=
SEMANTiCS 2024 workshops and tutorials may be either half or full day
long. Workshops and tutorials take place on the days before and/or after
the main SEMANTiCS 2024 EU conference (17th of September 2024). Further
details will be communicated in due time.
Organizers of workshops and tutorials will be granted three free tickets
(only for the workshop & tutorial day) for organization purposes or
keynotes. Participants of workshops and tutorials will only be charged a
reduced fee to cover the basic costs.
Workshop and tutorial proposals must include the following information:
* outline of the themes and goals of the event, including a title and a
brief abstract (less than 200 words) intended for the SEMANTiCS 2024
website.
* a statement addressing why the event is important, why the event is
timely, and how it is relevant to SEMANTiCS 2024 and the field of
Semantic Web. For the tutorials, why the presenters are qualified for a
high-quality introduction of the topic.
* related workshops and conferences, i.e., specifying if this is a
continuation of a workshop series or a new workshop. Please provide
information about past versions (in any) and other related workshops
(including URLs and submission/acceptance counts, if available).
* a statement addressing the quality assurance criteria that will be
used by the event organizers to select the papers for the workshops and
the presenters for the tutorials (e.g., peer review or review/evaluation
by event organizers). If a peer review process is chosen as a quality
assurance criterion for the workshops, the organizers will be
responsible for their own reviewing process. Workshop organizers will be
responsible also for their own publicity (e.g., website, timelines and
call for papers) and proceedings production.
* structure of the event and plans for generating and stimulating
discussion; how will the interaction be organized in case of a hybrid event.
* expected number of event participants and (in case of previously held
events) number of registered attendees and website for previous editions
of the event.
* a description of the intended audience and the expected learning outcomes.
* desired prerequisite knowledge of the audience.
* proposed duration of the event (i.e., half or full day), different
sessions if applicable (final time slot will be assigned in accordance
with the SEMANTiCS program).
* any equipment, room capacity, or other logistic constraints.
* full contact information of all organizers of the event and main
contact person; a brief description of each organizer's background,
including relevant past experience in organizing events.
Proposals for workshops and tutorials must be submitted via Easychair:
https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=sem24 (as a short paper type)
=Review and Evaluation Criteria=
Workshop and tutorial proposals will be reviewed by the SEMANTiCS 2024
Workshop & Tutorial Chairs, as well as by the SEMANTiCS 2024 organizing
committee, according to the following criteria:
* The potential to advance the state of Semantic Web research and practice
* The quality assurance criteria proposed by the organizers to select
high-quality presenters for tutorials
* The organizers' experience and ability to lead a successful event
* Timeliness and expected interest in the event topics
* The balance and synergy between all SEMANTiCS 2024 events
=Topics of interest include (but are not limited to)=
* Web Semantics & Linked (Open) Data
* Enterprise Knowledge Graphs, Graph Data Management
* Machine Learning Techniques for/using Knowledge Graphs (e.g.
reinforcement learning, deep learning, data mining and knowledge discovery)
* Interplay between Large Language Models, generative AI and Knowledge
Graphs (e.g., Retrieval Augmented Generation)
* Knowledge Management (e.g. acquisition, capture, extraction,
authoring, integration, publication)
* Terminology, Thesaurus & Ontology Management, Ontology engineering
* Reasoning, Rules and Policies
* Natural Language Processing for/using Knowledge Graphs (e.g. entity
linking and resolution using target knowledge such as Wikidata and
DBpedia, foundation models)
* Crowdsourcing for/using Knowledge Graphs
* Data Quality Management and Assurance
* Mathematical Foundation of Knowledge-aware AI
* Multimodal Knowledge Graphs
* Semantics in Data Science
* Semantics in Blockchain environments
* Trust, Data Privacy, and Security with Semantic Technologies
* IoT, Stream Processing, dealing with temporal data
* Conversational AI and Dialogue Systems
* Provenance and Data Change Tracking
* Semantic Interoperability (via mapping, crosswalks, standards, etc.)
* Linked Data storage, triple stores, graph databases
* Robust and scalable management, querying and analysis of semantics and
data
* User interfaces for the Semantic Web & its management
* Explainable and Interoperable AI
* Decentralised and Federated Knowledge Graphs (e.g., Federated
querying, link traversal)
* Application of Semantically-Enriched and AI-based Approaches, such as,
but not limited to: Knowledge Graphs in Bioinformatics, Medical AI and
Preventive Healthcare; Clinical Use Case of semantic-enabled AI-based
Approaches; AI for Environmental Challenges; Semantics in Scholarly
Communication and Scientific Knowledge Graphs; AI and LOD within GLAM
(galleries, libraries, archives, and museums) institutions; Knowledge
Graphs & hybrid AI for predictive maintenance and Industry 4.0/5.0;
Digital Humanities and Cultural Heritage; LegalTech, AI Safety, EU AI
Act; Economics of Data, Data Services, and Data Ecosystems
We especially invite contributions that illustrate the applicability of
the topics mentioned above for industrial purposes and/or illustrate the
business relevance of their contribution for specific industries.
Workshop proposals on emerging themes and open challenges for the topics
listed above are encouraged.
In case you have additional questions concerning the submission process,
please do not hesitate to contact us via Easychair.
We are looking forward to your contribution!
Workshop and Tutorial Chairs
Daniel Garijo & Andrea Mannocci
CALL FOR EXTENDED ABSTRACTS
CLARIN ERIC is pleased to announce the CLARIN Annual Conference 2024 and
calls for the submission of extended abstracts. CLARIN is the European
research infrastructure that makes digital language resources available
to scholars, researchers, students and citizen scientists from a wide
range of disciplines, coordinates the collection of language resources
and tools, and offers advanced tools to explore, exploit, annotate,
analyse or combine such datasets, regardless of their location.
New in this year's call is the topic of Education and Training with
CLARIN tools.
Submission deadline: 12 April 2024
LOCATION
After the successful hybrid editions of 2022 and 2023, we plan to repeat
the same format in 2024. The CLARIN Conference 2024 will be a
face-to-face event that will be fully accessible virtually. The
conference will take place in Barcelona, Spain. The event will be hosted
and organised by CLARIN ERIC in collaboration with CLARIAH-ES and the
Basque Center for Language Technology (HiTZ).
IMPORTANT DATES
* 24 January 2024: First call published on CLARIN website,
disseminated, and submission system open
* 12 February 2024: Second call for abstracts disseminated
* 29 March 2024: Third call for abstracts disseminated
* 12 April 2024: Submission deadline
* 17 June 2024: Notification of acceptance
* 2 September 2024: Camera-ready version deadline (that will be
extended)
* 15-17 October 2024: CLARIN Annual Conference
CONFERENCE AIMS
The CLARIN Annual Conference is organised for the wider Humanities and
Social Sciences (SSH) community in order to exchange experiences and
best practices in working with the CLARIN infrastructure and to share
plans for future developments. The programme will cover a range of
topics, including the design, construction and operation of the CLARIN
infrastructure, the data, tools and services that it contains or should
contain, its actual use by researchers, teachers or interested parties,
its relation to other infrastructures and projects, and the CLARIN
Knowledge Infrastructure.
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
To be confirmed.
CONFERENCE TOPICS
We invite submissions describing CLARIN-related work addressing the
following aspects:
Use of the CLARIN Infrastructure:
* Use of the CLARIN infrastructure in SSH research and beyond
* Usability studies and evaluations of CLARIN services
* Analysis of the CLARIN infrastructure usage and impact studies/use
cases
* Identification and analysis of user audiences and developer
communities, including digital humanities, libraries, computer science,
information science, cognitive science and human-centred AI
* Showcases, demonstrations and research projects that are relevant to
CLARIN
Design and Construction of the CLARIN Infrastructure:
* Recent tools and resources added to the CLARIN infrastructure
* Metadata and concept registries, cataloguing and browsing
* Persistent identifiers and citation mechanisms
* Access, including single sign-on authentication and authorisation
* Search functions, including Federated Content Search
* Web applications, web services and workflows
* Standards and solutions for interoperability of language resources,
tools and services
* Models for the sustainability of the infrastructure, including
curation, migration financing and cooperation
* Legal and ethical issues in operating the infrastructure.
CLARIN Knowledge Infrastructure and Dissemination;
* User assistance (help desks, user manuals, FAQs)
* CLARIN portals and outreach to users
* Videos, screencasts, recorded lectures
* Knowledge centres.
CLARIN vis-à-vis other Infrastructures and Initiatives:
* SSH research infrastructures, such as DARIAH [1] and CESSDA [2] and
the collaboration under the umbrella of the SSH Open Cluster [3], etc.
* Generic infrastructural initiatives, such as [4]EOSC [5], Europeana
[6], Language Data Space [7], etc.
* Projects such as ATRIUM [8], EOSC Focus [9], ERIC Forum [10], EOSC
Future [11], FAIRCORE4EOSC [12], OSCARS [13], OSTrails [14]
* National and regional initiatives.
Education and Training
* Using CLARIN language resources and services in teaching and
training activities targeting audiences from different sectors
(academia, GLAM, industry) and lessons learnt
* The impact of the DH Course Registry (e.g. development of the DH
curricula, student exchange programmes)
* Guidelines and best practices for using CLARIN in the university
curricula
* Developing new courses reusing existing materials from the CLARIN
Learning Hub (e.g. UPSKILLS)
FORMAT OF THE PROGRAMME SESSIONS
The programme of the conference will include oral presentations and
posters, and may also include demos. Due to limits in the time schedule,
the number of oral presentations is limited. Authors can select if they
prefer a poster presentation. If not, papers are allocated a
presentation format based on the suitability of the paper for a session
as decided by the programme committee. Authors of accepted submissions
will be offered the opportunity to demo their work in addition to their
presentation.
SUBMISSIONS
The language of the conference is English and presentations will be made
in English. Proposals for oral, poster or demo presentations must be
submitted as _extended abstracts_ (length: 3 to 4 pages A4, including
references) in PDF format, in accordance with the template (ZIP-archive
[15], Overleaf [16] template). Authors can choose whether to submit on
an anonymous or non-anonymous basis.
Extended abstracts should address one or more topics that are relevant
to CLARIN's activities, resources, tools or services. This relevance
should be explicitly articulated in the submission, as well as in the
presentation at the conference. Contributions addressing desiderata for
the CLARIN infrastructure that are currently not in place are also
eligible. Authors are not required to be or have been directly involved
in national or cross-national CLARIN projects.
Extended abstracts must be submitted through the EasyChair submission
system [17] and will be reviewed by the Programme Committee. All
proposals will be reviewed on the basis of the following criteria:
* Appropriateness: The contribution must pertain to the CLARIN
infrastructure or be relevant for it (e.g. its use, design,
construction, operation, exploitation, illustration of possible
applications, etc.), and this relevance should be explicitly articulated
in the submission.
* Soundness and correctness: The content must be technically and
factually correct and methods must be scientifically sound, according to
best practice, and preferably evaluated.
* Meaningful comparison: The abstract must indicate that the author is
aware of alternative approaches, if any, and highlight relevant
differences.
* Substance: Concrete work and experiences will be given preference
over ideas and plans.
* Impact: Contributions with a higher impact on the research community
and society more broadly will be given preference over papers with lower
impact.
* Clarity: The abstract should be clearly written and well structured.
* Timeliness and novelty: The work must convey relevant new knowledge
to the audience at this event.
ATTENDANCE
For each accepted abstract, CLARIN ERIC offers one author free access,
free accommodation and meals . Travelling costs are not covered by
CLARIN ERIC. Authors are encouraged to reach out to their national
consortium, to their home institution or to third party funds to cover
travel costs.
PROCEEDINGS
Accepted submissions will be published in the online conference Book of
Extended Abstracts, ISSN: 2773-2177. After the conference, the author(s)
of accepted submissions will be invited to submit full papers (10-12
pages) to be reviewed according to the same criteria as the abstracts.
Accepted full papers will be published in a digital conference
proceedings volume after the conference: Linköping Electronic Conference
Proceedings (peer reviewed) ISSN: 1650-3686 (print), 1650-3740 (online)
https://ep.liu.se/en/conferences.aspx [18]
CONFERENCE PROGRAMME COMMITTEE
The Programme Committee for the conference consists of the following
members:
* Vincent Vandeghinste, Instituut voor de Nederlandse Taal (Dutch
Language Institute), the Netherlands & KU Leuven, Belgium -- chair
* Starkaður Barkarson, Árni Magnússon Institute for Icelandic Studies,
Iceland
* Lars Borin, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
* António Branco, University of Lisbon, Portugal
* Tomaž Erjavec, Jožef Stefan Institute, Slovenia
* Cristina Grisot, University of Zurich and at the Swiss National
Center for Data & Services for the Humanities DaSCH
* Eva Hajičová, Charles University Prague, Czech Republic
* Marianne Hundt, University of Zurich, Switzerland
* Krister Lindén, University of Helsinki, Finland
* Monica Monachini, Institute of Computational Linguistics 'A.
Zampolli', Italy
* Karlheinz Mörth, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria
* Costanza Navarretta, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
* Gijsbert Rutten, Leiden University, the Netherlands
* Maciej Piasecki, Wrocław University of Science and Technology,
Poland
* Stelios Piperidis, ILSP, Athena Research Center, Greece
* German Rigau, HiTZ, the Basque Center for Language Technology, Spain
* Kiril Simov, IICT, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria
* Inguna Skadiņa, Institute of Mathematics and Computer Science,
University of Latvia, Latvia
* National Coordinator Norway
* Marko Tadić, University of Zagreb, Croatia
* Jurgita Vaičenonienė, Vytautas Magnus University, Lithuania
* Tamás Váradi, Research Institute for Linguistics, Hungarian Academy
of Sciences, Hungary
* Joshua Wilbur, Center of Estonian Language Resources, Estonia
* Andreas Witt, University of Mannheim, Germany
* Friedel Wolff, South African Centre for Digital Language Resources,
North-West University, South Africa
* Martin Wynne, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
Links:
------
[1] https://www.dariah.eu/
[2] https://www.cessda.eu/
[3] https://www.sshopencloud.eu/news/sshoc-ssh-open-cluster
[4] https://www.clarin.eu/glossary#EUDAT
[5] https://eosc.eu/about-eosc
[6] https://www.europeana.eu
[7] https://language-data-space.ec.europa.eu/
[8] https://www.clarin.eu/content/fact-sheet-clarin-atrium
[9] https://www.clarin.eu/content/factsheet-clarin-eosc-focus
[10] https://www.clarin.eu/content/fact-sheet-clarin-eric-forum-2
[11] https://eoscfuture.eu/
[12] https://faircore4eosc.eu/
[13] https://www.clarin.eu/content/fact-sheet-clarin-oscars
[14] https://www.clarin.eu/content/fact-sheet-clarin-ostrails
[15]
https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/biicfb3pulc4xtgcvm34j/CLARIN2024_Templates.z…
[16] https://www.overleaf.com/read/xsvjrhvjyfmj#f3362f
[17] https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=clarin2024
[18] https://ep.liu.se/en/conferences.aspx
*** CAiSE'24 Forum: Final Call for Papers and Tool Demonstrations ***
36th International Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering
(CAiSE'24)
June 3-7, 2024, 5* St. Raphael Resort and Marina, Limassol, Cyprus
https://cyprusconferences.org/caise2024/
(*** Submission Deadline: 4th March, 2024 AoE ***)
The CAiSE Forum is a space within the CAiSE conference to present and discuss the new
exciting ideas and tools related to Information Systems Engineering. The Forum intends to
serve as an interactive platform, encourage potential authors to present emerging topics and
controversial positions, and demonstrate innovative systems, tools, and applications. The
Forum sessions at the CAiSE conference will facilitate the interaction, discussion, and
exchange of ideas among presenters and participants. Contributions to the CAiSE'24 Forum
are welcome to address any of the CAiSE'24 conference topics and, particularly, this year's
theme—Information Systems in the Age of Artificial Intelligence.
We invite two types of submissions:
• Visionary papers present innovative research projects, which are still at a relatively early
stage and do not necessarily include a full-scale validation. Visionary papers will be
presented as posters in the Forum.
• Demo papers describe innovative tools and prototypes that implement the results of
research efforts. The tools and prototypes will be presented as demos in the Forum,
accompanied by a poster.
Both visionary papers and demo papers must not exceed 8 pages in LNCS format.
See authors' guidelines at the Springer site:
https://www.springer.com/gp/computer-science/lncs/conference-proceedings-gu… .
Papers should be submitted in PDF format through the conference management system
available at Easy Chair (https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=caise2024) and select the
Forum option.
The submitted papers must be unpublished and must not be under review elsewhere.
PUBLICATION AND PRESENTATIONS
Accepted papers will be published by Springer in a CAISE Forum proceedings volume within
the Lecture Notes in Business Information Processing (LNBIP) series
(https://www.springer.com/series/7911). Authors should consult Springer's authors
guidelines and use their LaTeX or Word proceedings templates for the preparation of their
papers. Springer encourages authors to include their ORCIDs in their papers. In addition, the
corresponding author of each paper, acting on behalf of all of the authors of that paper,
must complete and sign a Consent-to-Publish form. The corresponding author signing the
copyright form should match the corresponding author marked on the paper. Once the files
have been sent to Springer, changes relating to the authorship of the papers cannot be made.
It is expected that at least one of the authors attends CAiSE'24, presents the poster/delivers
the demo, and interacts with the Forum participants. We also envision a short oral
presentation for all papers to attract participants to the posters.
IMPORTANT DATES
• Paper Submission Deadline: 4th March, 2024 (AoE)
• Notification of Acceptance: 1st April, 2024
• Camera-ready Deadline: 8th April, 2024
• Author Registration Deadline: 8th April, 2024
FORUM CHAIRS
• Shareeful Islam, Anglia Ruskin University, United Kingdom
• Arnon Sturm, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel
FORUM COMMITTEE
• Steven Alter, University of San Francisco
• Abel Armas Cervantes, The University of Melbourne
• Giuseppe Berio, Université de Bretagne Sud and IRISA UMR 6074
• Drazen Brdjanin, University of Banja Luka
• Corentin Burnay, University of Namur
• Cinzia Cappiello, Politecnico di Milano
• Suphamit Chittayasothorn, King Mongkut's Institute of Technology Ladkrabang
• Maya Daneva, University of Twente
• Sergio de Cesare, University of Westminster
• Johannes De Smedt, KU Leuven
• Marne de Vries, University of Pretoria
• Michael Fellmann, University of Rostock
• Christophe Feltus, Luxembourg Institute of Science and Technology
• Hans-Georg Fill, University of Fribourg
• Janis Grabis, Riga Technical University
• Sergio Guerreiro, INESC-ID / Instituto Superior Técnico
• Martin Henkel, Stockholm University
• Jennifer Horkoff, Chalmers University of Technology
• Shareeful Islam, Anglia Ruskin University
• Janis Kampars, RTU
• Evangelia Kavakli, University of the Aegean
• Marite Kirikova, Riga Technical University
• Janne J. Korhonen, Aalto University
• Elena Kornyshova, CNAM
• Agnes Koschmider, University of Bayreuth
• Chung Lawrence, University of Texas at Dallas
• Henrik Leopold, Kühne Logistics University
• Tong Li, Beijing University of Technology
• Beatriz Marín, Universidad Politecnica de Valencia
• Andrea Marrella, Sapienza University of Rome
• Raimundas Matulevicius, University of Tartu
• Jose Ignacio Panach Navarrete, Universitat de València
• Oscar Pastor, Universidad Politécnica de Valencia
• Francisca Pérez, Universidad San Jorge
• Pierluigi Plebani, Politecnico di Milano
• Manuel Resinas, University of Seville
• Genaina Rodrigues, University of Brasilia
• Ben Roelens , Open Universiteit, Ghent University
• Mattia Salnitri, Politecnico di Milano
• Stefan Strecker, University of Hagen
• Arnon Sturm, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
• Irene Vanderfeesten, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
• Yves Wautelet, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
• Hans Weigand, Tilburg University
• Manuel Wimmer, Johannes Kepler University Linz
• Anna Zamansky, University of Haifa
Dear colleagues,
We are finally launching the 2024 GEM multilingual shared task! It
comprises 2 main tasks, Data-to-text generation and Summarization, each of
which has 3 subtasks. You can submit automatically generated outputs for
one or more subtask(s), in Arabic, Chinese, English, German, Hindi, Korean,
Russian, Spanish, and/or Swahili. More information at
https://gem-benchmark.com/shared_task.
Important dates:
- February 20: GEM shared task launched, pre-registration open.
- March 8: Deadline for pre-registering systems.
- April 5: Deadline for output submission (all subtasks).
- April 6 Human evaluation starts.
Looking forward to receiving your submissions!
best,
simon, on behalf of the GEM Human Evaluation Team
*ADAPT Research Centre / Ionaid Taighde ADAPT*
*School of Computing, Dublin City University, Glasnevin Campus
/ Scoil na Ríomhaireachta,
Campas Ghlas Naíon, Ollscoil Chathair Bhaile Átha Cliath*