VarDial 2024, the eleventh workshop on NLP for similar languages, varieties and dialects, will be held in conjunction with NAACL in Mexico City, on June 20/21, 2024.
We welcome papers dealing with one or more of the following topics:
- Corpora, resources, and tools for similar languages, varieties and dialects;
- Adaptation of tools (taggers, parsers) for similar languages, varieties and dialects;
- Evaluation of language resources and tools when applied to language varieties;
- Reusability of language resources in NLP applications (e.g., for machine translation, POS tagging, syntactic parsing, etc.);
- Corpus-driven studies in dialectology and language variation;
- Computational approaches to mutual intelligibility between dialects and similar languages;
- Automatic identification of lexical variation;
- Automatic classification of language varieties;
- Text similarity and adaptation between language varieties;
- Linguistic issues in the adaptation of language resources and tools (e.g., semantic discrepancies, lexical gaps, false friends);
- Machine translation between closely related languages, language varieties and dialects.
In addition to the topics listed above, we also welcome papers dealing with diachronic language variation (e.g. phylogenetic methods, historical dialects).
Paper submission deadline: March 10, 2024 (AoE)
Details: https://sites.google.com/view/vardial-2024/call-for-papers
The VarDial workshop has a history of hosting well-attended shared tasks on various dialects and languages. In 2024, we organize the two following tasks:
1. The DIALECT-COPA shared task on dialectal causal commonsense reasoning
This shared task invites the community to propose, develop, and test approaches for adapting models for causal commonsense language understanding to three dialects of South-Slavic languages: the Slovenian Cerkno dialect, the Croatian Chakavian dialect, and the Serbian, Macedonian and Bulgarian Torlak dialect. Training and development data based on the COPA (Choice of plausible alternatives, Roemmele et al. 2011) dataset are available for four related standard languages (Slovenian, Croatian, Serbian, Macedonian) and two out of the three testing dialects (Cerkno, Torlak), the Chakavian dialect serving as a surprise dialect.
2. DSL-ML - Multi-label classification of similar languages
The DSL-ML task is a multi-label extension of the classic "Discriminating similar languages" task that has been popular with VarDial since the beginnings of the workshop. The motivation behind this new task formulation is that some texts do not present any linguistic markers to unambiguously determine their origin. It therefore makes sense to predict several possible labels for such texts. The 2024 DSL-ML task is based on multi-label conversions of existing datasets from five different macro-languages: English, Spanish, Portuguese, French and BCMS (Bosnian, Croatian, Montenegrin, Serbian).
Test results submission deadline: March 11, 2024 (AoE)
System description paper submission deadline: March 24, 2024 (AoE)
Registration: https://forms.gle/UcLYcPgDFJoiAVip7
Details: https://sites.google.com/view/vardial-2024/shared-tasks
[Deadline Extension]
*Call for papers for the LREC-COLING2024 pre-conference workshop:
Holocaust Testimonies as Language Resources*
Date: 21 May 2024 (full day)
Venue: Lingotto Conference Centre, Turin, Italy
Webpage: https://www.clarin.eu/HTRes2024
<https://url6.mailanyone.net/scanner?m=1rX22L-0002ym-4R&d=4%7Cmail%2F90%2F17…>
Submission Extended Deadline: 28 February 2024
Submission Portal: https://softconf.com/lrec-coling2024/htres2024/
*Workshop description*
Holocaust testimonies serve as a bridge between survivors and history’s
darkest chapters, providing a connection to the profound experiences of the
past. Testimonies stand as the primary source of information that describe
the Holocaust, offering first-hand accounts and personal narratives of
those who experienced it. The majority of testimonies are captured in an
oral format, as survivors vividly explain and share their personal
experiences and observations from that time period. Transforming Holocaust
testimonies into a machine-processable digital format can be a difficult
task owing to the unstructured nature of the text. The creation of
accessible, comprehensive, and well-annotated Holocaust testimony
collections is of paramount importance to our society. These collections
empower researchers and historians to validate the accuracy of socially and
historically significant information, enabling them to share critical
insights and trends derived from these data. This workshop will investigate
a number of ways in which techniques and tools from natural language
processing and corpus linguistics can contribute to the exploration,
analysis, dissemination and preservation of Holocaust testimonies.
The workshop is supported by CLARIN and the European Holocaust Research
Infrastructure (EHRI).
We expect contributions related to the following topics:
Creation of datasets and development of tools for the study of Holocaust
testimonies:
- Creation of language corpora of Holocaust testimonies
- Digitisation and enhancement of oral and written testimonies
(including automatic speech recognition, alignment of text and speech,
format conversion, OCR, handwriting recognition, machine translation)
- Named entity recognition for identifying people, places, and events in
testimonies.
- Standards, representation formats, and guidelines for annotations and
vocabularies relevant to the Holocaust testimonies
- Creation, adaptation and tuning of software applications for the
creation, annotation, enhancement and use of Holocaust testimonies as
language resources.
- Research using and Holocaust testimonies.
- Applications of NLP in analysing Holocaust survivor testimonies
- Sentiment analysis and emotional content extraction from survivor
narratives.
- Data Visualisation, Knowledge representation and Information
Extraction:
- Visualising complex data structures from Holocaust testimonies
- Building knowledge graphs and networks to represent historical
relationships
- Interactive data visualisations for education and research
- Extracting biographical and temporal information relevant to the
Holocaust
- Deep learning and large language models
- Digital Archiving and Long-Term Preservation:
- Methods and tools for digitising and preserving Holocaust
testimonies
- Best practices for metadata standards and cataloguing
- Ensuring long-term accessibility and data integrity
- Ethical Considerations and Privacy
- Ethical challenges in digitising and sharing sensitive testimonies
- Anonymisation and privacy protection in Holocaust data
- Community engagement and consent in digital projects
- User and application aspects
- Development of tools and interfaces for the search, analysis and
exploration of Holocaust testimonies
- Other relevant use cases and application scenarios
All papers must clearly state and explain their relevance to the topic of
'Holocaust Testimonies as Language Resources'.
*Submission & Publication*
Papers will be evaluated according to their significance, originality,
technical content, style, clarity, and relevance to the workshop. We
welcome the following types of contributions:
- Standard research papers (up to 8 pages, plus more pages for
references if needed);
- Short research papers (from 4 to 6 pages, plus more pages for
references if needed).
Submissions must be anonymous and strictly follow the LREC2024 stylesheet
formatting
<https://url6.mailanyone.net/scanner?m=1rX22L-0002ym-4R&d=4%7Cmail%2F90%2F17…>guidelines.
All papers should be electronically submitted in PDF format via the main
conference platform via START
<https://url6.mailanyone.net/scanner?m=1rX22L-0002ym-4R&d=4%7Cmail%2F90%2F17…>
.
*Important Dates*
- *Paper submission deadline:* 21 February 2024
- *Extended paper submission deadline:* 28 February 2024
- *Notification of acceptance:* 20 March 2024
- *Camera-ready paper: *15 April 2024
- *Workshop date: *21 May 2024
*Organising Committee*
- Isuri Anuradha, University of Wolverhampton, UK
- Ingo Frommholz, University of Wolverhampton, UK
- Francesca Frontini, CNR-ILC, Italy & CLARIN, Italy
- Martin Wynne, Oxford University, UK
- Ruslan Mitkov, Lancaster University, UK
- Paul Rayson, Lancaster University, UK
- Alistair Plum, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg
*Programme Committee*
- Le An Ha, Ho Chi Minh City University of Foreign Languages and
Information Technology, Vietnam
- Federico Boschetti, CNR-Istituto di, Linguistica Computazionale “A.
Zampolli”, Italy
- Estelle Bunout, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg
- Martin Bulin, University of West Bohemia, Czech Republic
- Tim Cole, University of Bristol, UK
- Angelo Mario Del Grosso, CNR-Istituto di, Linguistica Computazionale
“A. Zampolli”, Italy
- Maria Dermentzi, King’s College London, UK
- Robert Ehrenreich, USHMM, USA
- Ignatius Ezeani, Lancaster University, UK
- Ian Gregory, Lancaster University, UK
- Arjan van Hessen, Radboud University
- Henk van den Heuvel, Radboud University & CLARIN ERIC
- Renana Keydar, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel
- William J.B. Mattingly, USHMM, USA
- Patricia Murrieta-Flores, Lancaster, University, UK
- Maciej Ogrodniczuk, Institute of Computer, Science, Polish Academy of
Sciences, Poland
- Maciej Piasecki, Wroclaw University of Science and Technology, Poland
- Rachel Pistol, King’s College London, UK
- Johannes-Dieter Steinert, University of Wolverhampton, UK
- Jan Svec, University of West Bohemia
- Gabor Toth, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg
- Eveline Wandl-Vogt, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna
CALL FOR PAPERS
The 11th Workshop on Argument Mining @ ACL 2024
August 15, 2024
https://argmining-org.github.io/2024/
The 11th Workshop on Argument Mining will be held on August 15, 2024, in
Bangkok, Thailand, together with ACL 2024.
The Workshop on Argument Mining provides a regular forum for presenting
and discussing cutting-edge research in argument mining (a.k.a
argumentation mining) for academic and industry researchers. By
continuing a series of ten successful previous workshops, this edition
will welcome the submission of long, short, and demo papers. Also, it
will feature two shared tasks and a keynote talk.
IMPORTANT DATES
Direct paper submission deadline (OpenReview): May 17, 2024
Paper commitment from ARR: May 24, 2024
Notification of acceptance: June 17, 2024
Camera-ready papers due: July 1, 2024
Workshop: August 15, 2024
TOPICS OF INTEREST
- Identification, Assessment, and Analysis of Arguments
- Identification of argument components (e.g., premises and
conclusions)
- Structure analysis of arguments within and across documents
- Relation Identification between arguments and counterarguments
(e.g., support and attack)
- Creation and evaluation of argument annotation schemes,
relationships to linguistic and discourse annotations, (semi-) automatic
argument annotation methods and tools, and creation of argumentation corpora
- Assessment of arguments for various properties (e.g., stance,
clarity)
- Generation of Arguments, Multi-modal and Multi-lingual Argument Mining
- Automatic generation of arguments and their components
- Consideration of discourse goals in argument generation
- Argument mining and generation from multi-modal/multi-lingual data
- Mining and Analysis of different Genres and Domains of Arguments
- Argument mining in specific genres and domains (e.g., education,
law, scientific writing)
- Analysis of unique styles within genres (e.g., short informal
text, highly structured writing)
- Knowledge Integration, Information Retrieval, and Real-world Applications
- Integration of commonsense and domain knowledge into
argumentation models
- Combination of information retrieval methods with argument mining
- Real-world applications, including argument web search, opinion
analysis and summarization, and misinformation detection
- Ethical Considerations and Future Reflections
- Reflection on the ethical aspects and societal impact of
argument-mining methods
- Reflection on the future of argument mining in light of the fast
advancement of large language models (LLMs)
SUBMISSIONS
The organizing committee welcomes submitting long papers, short papers,
and demo descriptions. Accepted papers will be presented via oral or
poster presentations and included in the ACL proceedings as workshop papers.
- Long paper submissions must describe substantial, original, completed,
and unpublished work. Wherever appropriate, concrete evaluation and
analysis should be included. Long papers must be at most eight pages,
including title, text, figures, and tables. An unlimited number of pages
is allowed for references. Two additional pages are allowed for
appendices, and an extra page is allowed in the final version to address
reviewers’ comments.
- Short paper submissions must describe original and unpublished work.
Please note that a short paper is not a shortened long paper. Instead,
short papers should have a point that can be made in a few pages, such
as a small, focused contribution, a negative result, or an interesting
application nugget. Short papers must be at most four pages, including
title, text, figures, and tables. An unlimited number of pages is
allowed for references. One additional page is allowed for the appendix,
and an extra page is allowed in the final version to address reviewers’
comments.
- Demo descriptions must be at most four pages, including title, text,
examples, figures, tables, and references. A separate one-page document
should be provided to the workshop organizers for demo descriptions,
specifying furniture and equipment needed for the demo.
Multiple Submissions
ArgMining 2024 will not consider any paper under review in a journal or
another conference or workshop at the time of submission, and submitted
papers must not be submitted elsewhere during the review period.
ArgMining 2024 will also accept submissions of ARR-reviewed papers,
provided that the ARR reviews and meta-reviews are available by the ARR
commitment deadline (May 24). However, ArgMining 2024 will not accept
direct submissions that are actively under review in ARR, or that
overlap significantly (>25%) with such submissions.
Submission Format
All long, short, and demonstration submissions must follow the
two-column ACL 2024 format. Authors are expected to use the LaTeX or
Microsoft Word style template
(https://github.com/acl-org/acl-style-files). Submissions must conform
to the official ACL style guidelines contained in these templates.
Submissions must be electronic and in PDF format.
Submission Link and Deadline For Direct Submissions
Authors have to fill in the submission form in the OpenReview system and
upload a PDF of their paper before May 17, 2024, 11:59 pm UTC-12h
(anywhere on earth).
https://openreview.net/group?id=aclweb.org/ACL/2024/Workshop/ArgMining
For the ARR commitment process, we will provide details in our second
call for papers.
Double Blind Review
ArgMining 2024 will follow the ACL policies for preserving the integrity
of double-blind review for long and short paper submissions. Papers must
not include authors’ names and affiliations. Furthermore,
self-references or links (such as GitHub) that reveal the author’s
identity, e.g., “We previously showed (Smith, 1991) …” must be avoided.
Instead, use citations such as “Smith previously showed (Smith, 1991) …”
Papers that do not conform to these requirements will be rejected
without review. Papers should not refer, for further detail, to
documents that are not available to the reviewers. For example, do not
omit or redact important citation information to preserve anonymity.
Instead, use the third person or named reference to this work, as
described above (“Smith showed” rather than “we showed”). Papers may be
accompanied by a resource (software and/or data) described in the paper,
but these resources should also be anonymized.
Unlike long and short papers, demo descriptions will not be anonymous.
Demo descriptions should include the authors’ names and affiliations,
and self-references are allowed.
ANONYMITY PERIOD (taken from the ACL call for papers in verbatim for the
most part)
We follow the ACL Policies for Review and Citation. Submissions must be
anonymized, but there is no anonymity period or limitation on posting or
discussing non-anonymous preprints while the work is under peer review.
BEST PAPER AWARD
In order to recognize significant advancements in argument mining
science and technology, ArgMining 2024 will include the Best Paper
award. All papers at the workshop are eligible for the best paper award,
and a selection committee consisting of prominent researchers in the
fields of interest will select the award recipients.
SHARED TASKS
We will be hosting two shared tasks this year:
1. Perspective Argument Retrieval
2. DialAM-2024: The First Shared Task on Dialogical Argument Mining
ArgMining 2024 ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
Yamen Ajjour, Leibniz University Hannover
Roy Bar-Haim, IBM Research
Roxanne El Baff, German Aerospace Center (DLR) and Bauhaus-Universität,
Weimar
Zhexiong Liu, University of Pittsburgh
Gabriella Skitalinskaya, Leibniz University Hannover
The Linguistics Research Unit of the Institute of Language and Communication (Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium) will be hosting Stefan Gries’s next bootcamp on statistics for linguistics with R from 08 to 12 July 2024.
The ‘Statistics for linguistics with R’ bootcamp is a hands-on introduction to statistical methods for both graduate students and seasoned researchers and is loosely based on the third edition (2021) of Gries’s textbook Statistics for linguistics with R. The course is intended for linguists who already have a basic knowledge in statistics and some experience using R and who wish to improve their proficiency in statistical modeling of linguistic data. Using the open source software and programming language R, we will deal with:
• fundamental aspects of fixed effects regression modeling for both numeric and binary response variables; these include exploration of data and their preparation for modeling, model formulation and selection; numerical and visual interpretation and evaluation of models;
• more advanced aspects of fixed-effects regression modeling such as contrasts for ordinal predictors, orthogonal contrasts, curvature of numeric predictors, and maybe general linear hypothesis tests;
• the theoretical foundations of mixed-effects regression modeling;
• applications of mixed-effects modeling for both numeric and binary response variables;
• tree-based methods and random forests: 'fitting' and interpreting them with importance scores, partial dependence scores, and detecting (not just capturing) interactions.
Online registration will start on 4 March 2024, 1 pm CEST. The number of participants is limited. If you would like to participate, mark the date in your diary!
https://uclouvain.be/en/research-institutes/ilc/cecl/rling2024.html
Contact email : magali.paquot(a)uclouvain.be<mailto:magali.paquot@uclouvain.be>
Magali Paquot
Convenor
(apologies for cross-posting)
The 9th Workshop on Linked Data in Linguistics: Resources, Applications,
Best PracticesSecond Call for Papers
Workshop colocated with *LREC-COLING 2024*,
Date: *May 25, 2024*
Venue: Torino, Italy and online
For up to date info, check: https://ldl2024.linguistic-lod.org/
The Linked Data in Linguistics (LDL) workshop series has established itself
as the premier venue for discussing the application of Semantic Web
technologies to the fields of linguistics, digital lexicography, and
digital humanities (DH).
While recent years have witnessed a steady growth in adoption of the
technology in these areas, its uptake in other relevant domains, most
notably in the case of natural language processing (NLP), continues to lag
behind.
This year, aside from embracing the full bandwidth of applications of LLOD
technologies and the closely related area of knowledge graphs in
linguistics, we welcome contributions addressing the application of LLOD
technologies to NLP applications, as well as those dealing with emerging
hot topics of future bridges between structured (linguistic) knowledge and
neural methods.
In addition, this year’s edition of the workshop will be a venue for
in-depth discussions on community standards and best practices, and, above
all, those related to the work of the W3C community groups OntoLex [1],
LD4LT [2] and BPMLOD [3]. To this end, it will include featured talks on
the latest achievements, developments, and perspectives of these W3C
Community Groups.
[1] Ontology-Lexica Community Group
[2] Linked Data in Language Technology Community Group
[3] Best Practices in Multilingual Linked Open Data
*Topics of interest*
We invite presentations of algorithms, methodologies, experiments, tools,
use cases, descriptions of ongoing or planned research projects as well as
position papers that describe the creation, publication or application of
linked linguistic data collections and their linking with other resources.
Descriptions of such data, and in particular, its uses in research
(linguistics, lexicology, digital humanities) and technology (NLP,
e-lexicography, localization) are also welcome. The following is a
non-exhaustive list of relevant topics:
1) Building, managing and linking language resources
- Lexicons and Lexical Data, including Dictionaries and Lexicographic
Resources
- Annotations and Annotated Corpora
- Entity Linking
2) Technologies, challenges and best practices for language technology and
language resources on the web:
- Interoperability
- Sustainability
-
FAIRness
3) Structured data in language technology:
- Knowledge Graphs
- Machine Learning
- Multilingual Technologies
- Language Knowledge Injection in LLMs
4) Show cases, case studies and applications by different communities of
practice:
- Multimodality
- Corpus Linguistics
- Lexicography
- Digital Humanities
5) Current directions and critical reflection. Position papers on:
- Ethical, legal, technological aspects of structured data in the age of
LLMs
- The role of LLOD in promoting low-resource languages
- Extensions of RDF and graph formalisms
We invite both long (8 pages and 2 pages of references) and short papers (4
pages and 2 pages of references) representing original research, innovative
approaches and resource descriptions. Short papers may also represent
project descriptions. These do not have to be implemented but discuss to
what extent and for which purposes Linguistic Linked Open Data is reused or
created. Projects that are still in their early stages and seek advice from
the broader Linguistic Linked Data community are welcome, especially if
they include underrepresented fields of study.
Papers should be formatted according to the LREC-COLING guidelines, please
see https://lrec-coling-2024.org/authors-kit/. Please note that the review
process will be *single-blind*.
*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).
*Important Dates*
- Submission Date: February 23 *March 1, 2024*
- Notification of Acceptance: March 22, 2024
- Camera-Ready: April 2, 2024
- Workshop: May 25, 2024
*Workshop Organizers*
- Christian Chiarcos (University of Augsburg, Germany)
- Katerina Gkirtzou (Athena Research Center, Greece)
- Maxim Ionov (University of Cologne, Germany)
- Fahad Khan (Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Italy)
- John P. McCrae, (University of Galway, Ireland)
- Elena Montiel Ponsoda (Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain)
- Patricia Martín Chozas (Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain)
Please get in contact via ldl2024(a)linguistic-lod.org.
*Program Committee*
- Sina Ahmadi (George Mason University, USA)
- Verginica Barbu Mititelu (Research Institute for Artificial
Intelligence of the Romanian Academy, Romania)
- Paul Buitelaar (Insight, Ireland)
- Sara Carvalho (University of Aveiro, Portugal)
- Rute Costa (NOVA FCSH/NOVA CLUNL, Portugal)
- Milan Dojchinovski (Czech Technical University, Czech Republic)
- Agata Filipowska (Uniwersytet Ekonomiczny w Poznaniu, Poland)
- Francesca Frontini (CNR-ILC, Italy)
- Frances Gillis Webber (University of Cape Town, South Africa)
- Voula Giouli (Athena Research Center, Greece)
- Dagmar Gromann (University of Vienna, Austria)
- Yoshihiko Hayashi (Waseda University, Japan)
- Alik Kirillovich (Higher School of Economics, Russia)
- Penny Labropoulou (Athena Research Center, Greece)
- Chaya Liebeskind (Jerusalem College of Technology, Israel)
- David Lindemann (University of the Basque Country, Spain)
- Francesco Mambrini (Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Italy)
- Monica Monachini (CNR-ILC, Italy)
- Steven Moran (Université de Neuchâtel, Switzerland)
- Diego Moussallem (Paderborn University, Germany)
- Roberto Navigli (“La Sapienza” Università di Roma, Italy)
- Petya Osenova (IICT-BAS, Bulgaria)
- Ana Ostroški Anić (Institute of Croatian Language and Linguistics,
Croatia)
- Giulia Pedonese (CNR-ILC, Italy)
- Sigita Rackevičienė (Mykolas Romeris University, Lithuania)
- Felix Sasaki (SAP, Germany)
- Andrea Schalley (Karlstad University, Sweden)
- Gilles Sérasset (University Grenoble Alpes, France)
- Milena Slavcheva (IICT-BAS, Bulgaria)
- Blerina Spahiu (Bicocca University, Italy)
- Ranka Stanković (University of Belgrade, Serbia)
- Armando Stellato (University of Rome, Italy)
- Federica Vezzani (University of Padua, Italy)
*Patricia Martín Chozas - Postdoctoral Researcher*
* Ontology Engineering Group*
Artificial Intelligence Department
ETSI Informáticos - Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
Phone: (+34) 910673091
LT4HALA 2024 -- deadline extension -- Third Workshop on Language Technologies for Historical and Ancient LAnguages @ LREC COLING 2024
The Third Workshop on Language Technologies for Historical and Ancient LAnguages (LT4HALA 2024) will be held on May 25th in Torino (Italy), co-located with LREC-COLING 2024. This one-day workshop seeks to bring together scholars, who are developing and/or are using Language Technologies (LTs) for historically attested languages, so to foster cross-fertilization between the Computational Linguistics community and the areas in the Humanities dealing with historical linguistic data, e.g. historians, philologists, linguists, archaeologists and literary scholars.
*
Submission deadline: 26th February 2024 **NEW DEADLINE: 1st March 2024**
Website: https://circse.github.io/LT4HALA/2024/
Submission page: https://softconf.com/lrec-coling2024/lt4hala2024/
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MentalRiskES at IberLEF 2024: Call for Participation
Website: https://sites.google.com/view/mentalriskes2024
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MentalRiskES describes the second edition of a novel task on early risk
identification of mental disorders in Spanish comments from social media
sources. The first edition took place last year in the IberLEF evaluation
forum as part of the SEPLN 2023. The task was resolved as an online
problem, that is, the participants had to detect a potential risk as early
as possible in a continuous stream of data. Therefore, the performance not
only depended on the accuracy of the systems but also on how fast the
problem was detected. These dynamics are reflected in the design of the
tasks and the metrics used to evaluate participants. For this second
edition, we propose three novel tasks, the first subtask is about
detection disorder, the second subtask consists of detecting the context
that may be associated with the disorder, and the third subtask is about
suicidal ideation detection.
We would like to invite you to participate in the following tasks:
1. Disorders detection (multi-class classification)
2. Disorder contextualization (fine-grained classification)
3. Suicidal ideation detection (binary classification)
Find out more at https://sites.google.com/view/mentalriskes2024.
MentalRiskES 2024 is part of the IberLEF Workshop and will be held in
conjunction with the SEPLN 2024 conference in Valladolid (Spain).
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Important Dates
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Feb 16th Registration open
Feb 21st Release of trial corpora (trial server available)
Mar 20th Release of training corpora
Mar 29th Registration closed
Apr 8th Release of test corpora and start of the evaluation
campaign (test server available and trial submissions closed)
Apr 12th End of evaluation campaign (deadline for submission
of runs)
Apr 18th Publication of official results and release of test
gold labels
May 10th Deadline for paper submission
May 31st Acceptance notification
Jun 17th Camera-ready submission deadline
July 11th Final camera-ready submission deadline (to IberLEF
organisers)
Please reach out to the organizers at MentalRiskEs@IberLEF2024.
The MentalRiskES 2024 organizing committee.
--
M. Dolores Molina González
-----------------------------------------------------------
Mas informacion sobre listas de correo en la Univ. de Jaen
http://www.ujaen.es/sci/redes/listas/
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*** Second Call for Papers ***
We invite paper submissions to the 8th Workshop on Online Abuse and Harms (WOAH), which will take place on June 20/21 at NAACL 2024.
Website: https://www.workshopononlineabuse.com/cfp.html
Join our WOAH community Slack channel<https://hatespeechdet-47d7560.slack.com/join/shared_invite/zt-2a8d96j4z-gkN…>!
Important Dates
Submission due: March 10, 2024
ARR reviewed submission due: April 7, 2024
Notification of acceptance: April 14, 2024
Camera-ready papers due: April 24, 2024
Workshop: June 20/21, 2024
Overview
Digital technologies have brought many benefits for society, transforming how people connect, communicate and interact with each other. However, they have also enabled abusive and harmful content such as hate speech and harassment to reach large audiences, and for their negative effects to be amplified. The sheer amount of content shared online means that abuse and harm can only be tackled at scale with the help of computational tools. However, detecting and moderating online abuse and harms is a difficult task, with many technical, social, legal and ethical challenges. The Workshop on Online Abuse and Harms invites paper submissions from a wide range of fields, including natural language processing, machine learning, computational social sciences, law, politics, psychology, sociology and cultural studies. We explicitly encourage interdisciplinary submissions, technical as well as non-technical submissions, and submissions that focus on under-resourced languages. We also invite non-archival submissions and civil society reports.
The topics covered by WOAH include, but are not limited to:
* New models or methods for detecting abusive and harmful online content, including misinformation;
* Biases and limitations of existing detection models or datasets for abusive and harmful online content, particularly those in commercial use;
* New datasets and taxonomies for online abuse and harms;
* New evaluation metrics and procedures for the detection of harmful content;
* Dynamics of online abuse and harms, as well as their impact on different communities
* Social, legal, and ethical implications of detecting, monitoring and moderating online abuse
In addition, we invite submissions related to the theme for this eighth edition of WOAH, which will be online harms in the age of large language models. Highly capable Large Language Models (LLMs) are now widely deployed and easily accessible by millions across the globe. Without proper safeguards, these LLMs will readily follow malicious instructions and generate toxic content. Even the safest LLMs can be exploited by bad actors for harmful purposes. With this theme, we invite submissions that explore the implications of LLMs for the creation, dissemination and detection of harmful online content. We are interested in how to stop LLMs from following malicious instructions and generating toxic content, but also how they could be used to improve content moderation and enable countermeasures like personalised counterspeech. To support our theme, we have invited an interdisciplinary line-up of high-profile speakers across academia, industry and public policy.
Submission
Submission is electronic, using the Softconf START conference management system.
Submission link: https://softconf.com/naacl2024/WOAH2024/manager/scmd.cgi?scmd=submitPaperCu…
The workshop will accept three types of papers.
* Academic Papers (long and short): Long papers of up to 8 pages, excluding references, and short papers of up to 4 pages, excluding references. Unlimited pages for references and appendices. Accepted papers will be given an additional page of content to address reviewer comments. Previously published papers cannot be accepted.
* Non-Archival Submissions: Up to 2 pages, excluding references, to summarise and showcase in-progress work and work published elsewhere.
* Civil Society Reports: Non-archival submissions, with a minimum of 2 pages and no upper limit. Can include work published elsewhere.
Format and styling
All submissions must use the official ACL two-column format, using the supplied official style files. The templates can be downloaded in Style Files and Formatting<https://github.com/acl-org/acl-style-files>.
Please send any questions about the workshop to organizers(a)workshopononlineabuse.com<mailto:organizers@workshopononlineabuse.com>
Organisers
Paul Röttger, Bocconi University
Yi-Ling Chung, The Alan Turing Institute
Debora Nozza, Bocconi University
Aida Mostafazadeh Davani, Google Research
Agostina Calabrese, University of Edinburgh
Flor Miriam Plaza-del-Arco, Bocconi University
Zeerak Talat, MBZUAI
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Dear colleagues,
We are glad to share the second Call for Paper of the Joint Workshop of the
7th Financial Technology and Natural Language Processing (FinNLP) and the
5th Knowledge Discovery from Unstructured Data in Financial Services (KDF)
at LREC-COLING-2024. This workshop aims at discussing NLP for financial
applications and knowledge discovery from financial data. *The submission
deadline is March 1st, 2024, and here is the Submission System:
https://softconf.com/lrec-coling2024/finnlp-kdf2024/
<https://softconf.com/lrec-coling2024/finnlp-kdf2024/>*
In addition to the main track, we will have two keynote talks provided by
Dr. James Zhang (Ant Group) and Prof. Diyi Yang (Stanford). Besides, we
also have a shared task related to ESG (environmental, social, and
corporate governance). Please visit our website for more details:
https://sites.google.com/nlg.csie.ntu.edu.tw/finnlp-kdf-2024/home
We look forward to receiving your submissions and welcoming you to join
FinNLP-KDF.
Best Regards,
FinNLP-KDF organizers
*Call for Paper - FinNLP-KDF*
*Topics of Interest*We invite submissions of original contributions on
methods, theories, applications, and systems on artificial intelligence,
machine learning, natural language processing & understanding, big data,
statistical learning, data analytics, and deep learning, with a focus on
knowledge discovery in the financial services domain. The scope of the
workshop includes, but is not limited to, the following areas:
- Representation learning, and distributed representation learning and
encoding in natural language processing for financial document
- Language modeling on financial corpora including tabular and numerical
data, and multi-modal modeling; large language models (LLMs) and
applications for finance
- Graph representation learning, mining learning on graph structures
from financial data
- Multi-source knowledge integration and fusion, and knowledge alignment
and integration from heterogeneous data
- Synthetic or genuine financial datasets and benchmarks for baseline
models
- Transfer learning applications for financial data, knowledge
distillation as a method for compression of pre-trained models or
adaptation to financial datasets
- Search and question answering systems designed for financial corpora
- Event discovery from alternative data and impact on organization
equity price
- Environmental, social, governance (ESG) event discovery, evaluation,
and impact assessment
*Submission Details*
- Submission Deadline: March 1st, 2024
- Paper Notification: March 20th
- Camera-Ready Deadline: March 25th
- FinNLP-KDF-2024: May 20, 2024
Accepted papers proceedings will be published at ACL Anthology.
*Format*
- The LREC-COLING template MUST be used for your submission(s).
- Long Paper: May consist of up to 8 pages of content, plus unlimited
pages for references and appendix.
- Short Paper and Demo Paper: May consist of up to 4 pages of content,
plus unlimited references and appendix.
*Policies*
- The reviewing process will be double-blind for Long and Short Paper,
and single-blind for Demo Paper. Submissions must be in electronic form
using the FinNLP-KDF-2024 paper submission link above.
- At least one author of each accepted paper should register and present
their work (either online or in-person) in FinNLP-KDF-2024. Papers with “No
Show” may be redacted. Authors will be required to agree to this
requirement at the time of submission.
- 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).