[Apologies for multiple postings]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
CLiC-it 2024 - Tenth Italian Conference on Computational Linguistics
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4 - 6 December 2024, Pisa, Italy
Third CFP - important updates
https://clic2024.ilc.cnr.it/
DEADLINE EXTENSION
- **22/07/2024**: EXTENDED paper submission deadline: regular papers and research communications (11:59 pm CEST)
- 23/09/2024: Notification to authors of reviewing/selection outcome
- 21/10/2024: Camera ready version of accepted papers
- 4-6/12/2024: CLiC-it 2024 Conference, Pisa
RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS
CLiC-it 2024 adopts a parallel submission policy for outstanding papers accepted **in both 2023 and 2024** by major publication venues, namely the major international CL conferences (workshops excluded) or international journals. When submitting the proposal, the appropriate track should be selected.
SUBMISSION TEMPLATE AND PROCEDURE
Submission guidelines are detailed in the conference website: https://clic2024.ilc.cnr.it/information-for-authors/
Please note that as stated in the CEUR guidelines (https://ceur-ws.org/HOWTOSUBMIT.html), "The minimum length of a regular or short paper should be five "standard" pages (=2500 chars per page, calculated from a sample of LNCS one-column papers)."
Firma il tuo 5xmille all'Universit? di Parma. Aiutaci a potenziare la capacit? di accoglienza, soprattutto abitativa, per le studentesse e gli studenti. - Indica 00308780345 nella tua dichiarazione dei redditi.
(Apologies for cross-postings)
===== FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT =====
RANLP-25
RECENT ADVANCES IN NATURAL LANGUAGE PROCESSING
Varna, Bulgaria
http://ranlp.org/ranlp2025/
Summer School ‘Deep Learning and Large Language Models for NLP’: 3-5 September 2025 (Wednesday-Friday)
Tutorials: 6-7 September 2025 (Saturday-Sunday)
Main Conference: 8-10 September 2025 (Monday-Wednesday)
Workshops and shared tasks: 11-12 September 2025 (Thursday-Friday)
RANLP (Recent Advances in Natural Language Processing) is one of the most influential and competitive NLP conferences.
The event is held biennially and grew out of the International Summer schools "Contemporary topics in Computational Linguistics"
which were organised for many years as international training events. Previous RANLP conferences (1995, 1997, 2001, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2009,
2011, 2013, 2015, 2017, 2019, 2021 and 2023) featured keynote talks by leading experts in NLP as well as presentations/papers of
high quality, rigorously reviewed by a Programme Committee of well-known researchers. After 2009, the papers accepted at RANLP
and the associated workshops have been included in the ACL Anthology.
The RANLP proceedings are indexed by SCOPUS and DBLP. The Proceedings has its own Scopus SJR, in 2023 it is 0,299.
The conference will be preceded by a Summer School on Deep Learning and Large Language Models in NLP as well as 4-6 tutorials
on current topics of particular interest and cutting edge technologies. RANLP-2025 will be followed by selected workshops
on specialised NLP topics as well as shared tasks. A Student Research Workshop will be held in parallel with the main conference.
The Student Research Workshops (now 9th edition) have become active discussion forums for young researchers.
Expected conference submission deadline: end of April/beginning of May 2025
(please regularly check http://ranlp.org/ranlp2025/ for updated information)
Call for shared tasks proposals: September 2024
Call for workshop proposals: December 2024
Venue: RANLP-25 will be held in Cherno More Hotel, Varna, Bulgaria. The event venue offers excellent conference facilities.
The International airport of Varna conveniently connects Varna to major airports in Central Europe, Sofia, Istanbul and many others.
TEAM BEHIND RANLP-25
Galia Angelova, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria (OC Chair)
Ruslan Mitkov, University of Lancaster, UK (PC Chair)
Preslav Nakov, MBZUAI, Abu Dhabi, UAE
Nikolai Nikolov, Bulgarian Association for Computational Linguistics, Bulgaria
Ivelina Nikolova, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria
Petya Osenova, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria (Workshops Co-Chair)
Kiril Simov, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria (Workshops Co-Chair)
Saad Ezzini, Lancaster University, UK (Sponsorship Chair and Shared tasks Co-Chair)
Tharindu Ranasinghe, Lancaster University, UK (Shared tasks Co-Chair)
Call for submissions: Conference on Rational Approaches in Language Science (RAILS)
The 2nd Conference on Rational Approaches in Language Science (RAILS) will be held in Saarbruecken, Germany, 13-15 February 2025. The central theme of this conference is rational communication, i.e. the idea that language users continuously strive to optimize their means of communication to effectively convey their intended messages. RAILS brings together research on (1) how interlocutors process and update information in diverse situational contexts, (2) how language use is adapted to certain contexts and intended referents, and (3) how linguistic and conceptual information is stored and maintained in short- and long-term memory.
We invite submissions from researchers across the language sciences – including speech science, theoretical linguistics, empirical linguistics, psycholinguistics and neuroscience, computational linguistics, as well as language development, change and evolution – who apply rational probabilistic explanations to linguistic phenomena, or bring novel experimental findings to bear on such accounts.
Keynote speakers:
Mark Dingemanse (Radboud University)
Richard Futrell (University of California, Irvine)
Adele Goldberg (Princeton University)
Rachel Ryskin (University of California, Merced)
Submission guidelines:
Abstracts should be submitted as a single PDF file via https://app.oxfordabstracts.com/stages/43090/submissions/new <https://app.oxfordabstracts.com/stages/43090/submissions/new?behalf=false&f…>, adhering to the guidelines listed on our conference website <https://sfb1102.uni-saarland.de/sfb-conference-2025/>.
We accept submissions for posters and/or talks. Talks are slated for 20 minutes plus 10 minutes for questions.
Submission of planned work is invited for poster presentation only. Note that, if accepted, we expect results to be presented at the conference.
Important dates:
Submissions open: 8 July, 2024
Submissions due: 16 September, 2024
Notification of acceptance: 4 November, 2024
Registration period: 11 November-16 December, 2024
De-anonymized abstracts due in final form: 2 December, 2024
Conference: 13-15 February, 2025
Scientific Committee:
Regine Bader
Stefania Degaetano-Ortlieb
Katja Haeuser
Robin Lemke
Ivan Yuen
Scientific and financial support for this conference comes from the Collaborative Research Center SFB1102 Information Density and Linguistic Encoding <https://nam10.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sfb110…>.
For inquiries, please send an email to rails2025(a)lst.uni-saarland.de <mailto:rails2025@lst.uni-saarland.de>.
Stefania Degaetano-Ortlieb
Associate Professor
Universität des Saarlandes
Language Science and Technology
Campus A2.2, 1.06
66123 Saarbrücken
Tel.: ++49 681 302 70077
E-Mail: s.degaetano(a)mx.uni-saarland.de
www.stefaniadegaetano.com
Eighth Workshop on the Use of Computational Methods in the Study of
Endangered Languages (ComputEL-8)
March 3-4, 2024
Honolulu, Hawai’i
URL: https://computel-workshop.org/computel-8/
EMAIL: computel.workshop(a)gmail.com
Read to the end for guidelines for the Special Session submissions deadline.
FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS FOR REGULAR SESSION
We invite submissions to the 8th workshop on the Use of Computational
Methods in the Study of Endangered Languages, by October 7, 2024.
The ComputEL-8 workshop focuses on the use of computational methods in
the study, support, and revitalization of endangered languages. The
primary aim of the workshop is to continue narrowing the gap between
computational linguists interested in methods for low resource
languages, academic linguists documenting languages, and the language
communities who are striving to maintain their languages. We encourage
submissions from scholars and activists representing any or all of these
perspectives.
The intention of the workshop is not merely to allow for the
presentation of research, but also to build a network of computational
linguists, documentary linguists, and community language activists who
are able to effectively join together and serve their common interests.
WORKSHOP VENUE
ComputEL-8 will take place March 3-4, 2024, immediately preceding be
co-located with the 9th International Conference on Language
Documentation & Conservation (ICLDC) in Honolulu, Hawaii
(https://ling.lll.hawaii.edu/sites/icldc/). In-person events will be
co-located with the ICLDC at the University of Hawai’i Manoa.
The workshop will be a virtual/in-person hybrid event. Ability to attend
in person will not affect consideration of submissions.
CALL FOR PAPERS
We encourage submissions that explore the interface and intersection of
computational linguistics, documentary linguistics, and community-based
efforts in language revitalization and reclamation. This includes
submissions that:
(i) propose or demonstrate new methods or technologies for tasks or
applications focused on low-resource settings, and in particular,
endangered languages.
(ii) examine the use of specific methods in the analysis of data from
low-resource languages, or propose new methods for analysis of such
data, oriented toward the goals of language reclamation and revitalization
(iii) propose new models for the collection, management, and
mobilization of language data in community settings, with attention to
issues of data sovereignty and community protocols
(iv) explore concrete steps for a more fruitful interaction among
computer scientists, documentary linguists, and language communities
IMPORTANT DATES
07-Oct-2024 Deadline for submission of papers or extended abstracts
22-Nov-2024 Notification of Acceptance
10-Jan-2025 Camera-ready papers due
3-4 March 2025 Workshop
PRESENTATIONS
Presentation of accepted papers will be in both oral sessions and a
poster session. The decision on whether a presentation for a paper will
be oral and/or poster will be made by the Organizing Committee on the
advice of the Program Committee, taking into account the subject matter
and how the content might be best conveyed. Oral and poster
presentations will not be distinguished in the Proceedings.
SUBMISSIONS
In line with our goal of reaching multiple overlapping communities, we
offer two modes of submission: extended abstract and full paper. The
mode of submission does not influence the likelihood of acceptance.
Either can be submitted to one of the workshop’s tracks: (a) language
community perspective and (b) academic perspective.
All submissions must be anonymous following ACL guidelines and will be
peer-reviewed by the scientific committee.
A. Extended Abstract:
Please submit anonymous abstracts of up to 1500 words, excluding
references. Extended abstracts must be submitted as attached documents.
B. Full Paper:
Please submit anonymously either
a) a long paper (max. 8 pages excluding references and appendices), or
b) a short paper (max. 4 pages excluding references)
PROCEEDINGS
The authors of selected accepted full papers (long or short) will be
invited by the Organizing Committee to submit their papers for online
publication via the open-access ACL Anthology. Final versions of long
and short papers will be allotted one additional page (altogether 5 and
9 pages) excluding references.
Proceedings papers should be revised and improved versions of the work
that underwent review. Any revisions should concern responses to
reviewer comments or the addition of relevant details and
clarifications, but not entirely new, unreviewed content. Camera-ready
versions of the articles for publication will be due on January 10, 2025.
SPECIAL THEME SESSION: BUILDING TOOLS TOGETHER
In addition to the Regular Session, ComputEL-8 invites self-identified
submissions to a Special Themed Session on “Building Tools Together.”
This Session will focus on amplifying our shared understanding of how
best to work together across disciplinary and cultural boundaries to
build technological tools that support community language revitalization.
We invite presentations that: (1) Describe the development of new tools
and technologies in collaborative teams, and/or (2) Describe or identify
technological or computational needs within community language
revitalization contexts, and/or propose solutions.
For presentations that describe the development of new tools and
technologies in collaboration among language communities, academic
researchers, and (in some cases) industry or non-governmental
organizations, we encourage submissions which address questions such as:
a. How did the idea for the tool or technology come about?
b. How did the team members meet and come to work together?
c. What has been the impact of this tool? How are you evaluating it? How
has the project benefitted community efforts at language maintenance and
revitalization?
d. What are some challenges (logistical, technical, interdisciplinary,
intercultural) that you encountered, and how did you address them?
e. How have you balanced the needs and priorities of different team
members through the lifespan of the project?
f. What lessons have you learned that might benefit similar collaborations?
For presentations that identify technological or computational needs
within community language revitalization contexts, and/or propose
solutions, we encourage submissions which address questions such as:
a. What is the need that this tool would meet? Who will it serve?
b. What is the blue-sky version of this tool? What is the minimum viable
product version?
c. What kinds of data, digital assets, or media content would be
required to create the tool, and how would they be assembled?
d. What challenges might the team face in the development process?
e. How do you anticipate the collaborative process to best incorporate
diverse areas of expertise from cultural and community-grounded
knowledge to academic, technical, and production-oriented knowledge?
SUBMISSIONS to the SPECIAL THEME SESSION
Please submit anonymous extended abstracts of up to 1500 words,
excluding references.
Submissions representing community-led collaborations are strongly
encouraged.
Submissions to the Regular Session may choose to be considered for the
Special Session as well. Same considerations will be given for
publication whether papers are accepted to the Main Session or the
Special Session. Alternatively, authors may submit abstracts only to the
Special Session.
The deadline for submissions is 11:59pm 7 October, 2024 (Anywhere on
Earth).
You may indicate that your full paper or extended abstract be considered
for inclusion in the Special Session.
Notification of acceptance to the Special Session will be sent out by
November 22, 2024.
All authors of papers in the Special Theme Session will be invited to
contribute to a follow-up paper that synthesizes the findings of the
Session.
IMPORTANT DATES (SPECIAL SESSION)
07-Oct-2024 Deadline for submission of papers or extended abstracts
22-Nov-2024 Notification of Acceptance
10-Jan-2025 Camera-ready papers due
3-4 March 2025 Workshop with Special Session
MORE INFORMATION about Special Session submissions will follow on our
website and subsequent calls for papers, see:
URL: https://computel-workshop.org/computel-8/
ComputEL-8 ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
Godfred Agyapong (University of Florida)
Antti Arppe (University of Alberta)
Aditi Chaudhary (Google DeepMind)
Jordan Lachler (University of Alberta)
Sarah Moeller (University of Florida)
Shruti Rijhwani (Google DeepMind)
Daisy Rosenblum (University of British Columbia)
CONTACT the OC
For further information email us at:
computel.workshop(a)gmail.com
--
======================================================================
Antti Arppe - Ph.D (General Linguistics), M.Sc. (Engineering)
Professor of Quantitative Linguistics
Director, Alberta Language Technology Lab (ALTLab)
Project Director, 21st Century Tools for Indigenous Languages (21C)
Past President, ACL SIG for Endangered Languages (SIGEL)
Department of Linguistics, University of Alberta
E-mail: arppe(a)ualberta.ca, antti.arppe(a)iki.fi
WWW: www.ualberta.ca/~arppe, altlab.artsrn.ualberta.ca
Mānahtu ina rēdûti ihza ummânūti ihannaq - dulum ugulak úmun ingul
----------------------------------------------------------------------
(Apologies for cross-posting)
Workshop Complexity in Language Sciences
December 12-13, 2024
Paris, France
Submissions deadline : September 9, 2024
=========
While speaking, writing, listening and reading are easy, simple, and natural activities for those who practice them on a daily basis, what can be said about the cognitive and linguistic processes that underlie them? What about the languages in which these activities are practiced, and the theories and models developed to explain and represent the mechanisms involved? And finally, what can be said about individuals (speakers, listeners, writers, readers) who have not yet finished the learning process of these activities (children in the language acquisition phase, adults learning a second language), especially given that certain processes that may prove particularly difficult or even impossible (e.g.: writing in deaf people)?
The question of complexity quickly arises, and the notion is regularly invoked in the language sciences, though often in a vague and intuition-driven way. In practice, this question takes on different forms depending on who is formulating it (psycholinguists, linguists, descriptive or model scientists, etc.) and who is targeted by it (speakers, listeners, natives, non-natives, learners, atypical subjects, etc.). In short, how complex, for whom and why? Is it necessary or contingent complexity? To answer these questions, we need to know what kind of complexity we're talking about: conceptual (e.g. representation of time and reference in languages), formal (e.g. at the phonological, graphic, morphological and syntactic level) or physiological (unnatural articulatory gestures, material constraints)? Does one complexity call for another (e.g. does the complex conception of time in a language call for a complex syntax, does formal complexity imply cognitive complexity and vice versa?).
The aim of this conference is to discuss the current state of the art on complexity in the language sciences. It will offer the opportunity to examine the history and use of the notion of complexity in linguistics, through a variety of theoretical and epistemological perspectives. Its ambition is to bring together linguists working on spoken and written language, NLP/computer scientists and psycholinguists, etc., to discuss the complexity that runs, to varying degrees, through the different components of language and discourse (segmental, suprasegmental, morphological, syntactic, semantic, pragmatic). The expected result is to elaborate a concept that will work for the community, however stratified it may be, since the criteria on which it is based are obviously many:
• For the linguist, complexity is that which is not simple to represent and model, because (i) it is not easily predictable (e.g. unexpected constructions, productions that escape general rules), (ii) it could be of a continuous nature, and therefore difficult to isolate or categorize (e.g. the prosodic level of representation as opposed to the segmental level; opaque or indefinite reference)[1]. A complex element is also an observable that can be described but which resists explanation (e.g. errors in deaf writing).
• For the human subject, everything that is unnatural and therefore difficult to produce or to hear (such as a foreign language) can be considered as complex. Complexity can also refer to units which are linguistically underspecified, and thus ambiguous or implicit, entailing a high cognitive load.
While human subjects or linguists might view complexity as an obstacle to learning or a challenge in representing language, complexity is conversely necessary to the very existence of natural languages and their uses. From a synchronic point of view, complexity plays a part in regulating the linguistic system, the internal balance of a language, based on a partition between complex and simple elements (e.g. poor morphology vs. complex tonal system in Chinese). What remains to be understood is how this balance is determined in languages. From a diachronic point of view, complexity seems to play the same role, whether it's a question of simplifying certain processes and maintaining the formal economy of the system (e.g. deletion of phonological oppositions with low functional output, grammaticalization processes), or, on the contrary, reintegrating complexity (e.g. the transition from pidgin to creole).
This raises a question for the language sciences: how can we account for linguistic complexity? Which approach would be most adequate: typological and contrastive, or internal, experimental, or inductive on large corpora? How should complexity be measured, and what measurement standard should be proposed? Which scale and which descriptors should be used? For example, can we assume the existence of a neutral SVO sentence in order to work on complex structures in syntax? Can the concepts of transformation and movement proposed by generative grammar be used to work on syntactic complexity? If so, how? If not, what descriptors should be used to replace them: "easily" quantifiable descriptors (cf. work on text readability or simplification, which systematically use them), such as sentence length or the types of dependency between elements (e.g. number, length, direction)? The question of medium sheds a different light on complexity, particularly with regards to the syntactic component. Is the syntactic structure of a message more complex in spoken or written form? And from what point of view? In production or reception? From the point of view of language activity or from the point of view of linguistic representation and modeling?
In semantics and pragmatics, how can we deal with the meaning-form relationship? How can we deal with ambiguity and implicitness? Can a text be simple, given that it contains a set of units and constructions that are themselves complex. If so, what mechanism of adjustment or qualitative change are necessary? In text linguistics, the notion of complexity has been seen in various ways; for example, through the study of the textualization process itself; through the measurement and quantification of writers' pauses or revisions; by the methods used in applied linguistics to simplify texts, too difficult to be understood and needing to be adapted for a particular audience.
Finally, there's a central question in modeling: how does one manage the complexity of the object that is to be represented? How does one break down a complex object into simple elements without losing information? How can we understand which properties are necessary and sufficient to represent the system's operation? How can we approach the question of how multiple descriptors relate to each other using mathematical formulas that go further than the formulas proposed in the field of readability? Among the descriptors, one could for example be interested in units or dependency relations in syntax, in contours or tones in languages with accentual prosody, in operations underlying the description of the semantics of lexical and grammatical units (e.g. deictic operation), in referencing operations to different spaces of validation of predicative contents (e.g. hypothetic spaces), or even in different types of relations between textual units (e.g. embedding, inclusion, successivity). From the point of view of skill acquisition, a point of interest can be the way we can correlate linguistic structures and the stages of an individual's cognitive development.
Important dates:
September 9, 2024 – abstract submissions
October 15, 2024 - scientific committee decision
December 12-13, 2024 - Workshop
Submission instructions:
Abstracts, written in French or English, are due on September 9 at the latest:
- 1 cover page including the name and affiliation of the author(s) ;
- 1-2 pages of text (excluding references);
- 3 to 5 keywords.
They should be sent to MAIL to:
Delphine Battistelli, Modyco, Paris Nanterre : delphine.battistelli(a)parisnanterre.fr
Georgeta Cislaru, Modyco, Paris Nanterre : georgeta.cislaru(a)parisnanterre.fr
Sascha Diwersy, Praxiling, Paul Valéry Montpellier : sascha.diwersy(a)univ-montp3.fr
Anne Lacheret, Modyco, Paris Nanterre : anne.lacheret(a)parisnanterre.fr
Dominique Legallois, Lattice, Sorbonne Nouvelle : dominique.legallois(a)sorbonne-nouvelle.fr
Scientific Committee:
Basso Pierluigi, Université Lumière Lyon 2
Blache Philippe CNRS, ILCB, Laboratoire Parole & Langage, Université Aix Marseille
Blumenthal-Dramé Alice, Freiburg Institute for Advanced Studies
Brunetti Lisa, LLF, Université Paris Cité
Feltgen Quentin, Université de Gand
François Thomas, Cental, UCLouvain
Gala Núria, LPL, Aix Marseille Université.
Grandjean Didier, Swiss Center for Affective Sciences, Université de Genève
Heidlmayr Karin, MoDyCo, CNRS-Université Paris Nanterre
Kahane Sylvain, MoDyCo, CNRS-Université Paris Nanterre
Lampitelli Nicola, MoDyCo, CNRS-Université Paris Nanterre
Landragin Frédéric, Lattice, CNRS
Nadvornikova Olga, Université Charles, Prague
Olive Thierry, CeRCA, CNRS – Université de Poitiers
Prévost Sophie, Lattice, CNRS
Watine Marie-Albane, BCL, Université Côte d’Azur
Ziegler Johannes, Centre de Recherche en Psychologie et Neuroscience (CRPN) CNRS et Université Aix Marseille.
Selected References
Barbaresi, Adrien. 2011. La complexité linguistique, méthode d’analyse. TALN Jun 2011, Montpellier, France. pp.229-234.
Berthoz, Alain. 2009. La Simplexité, Paris, Odile Jacob.
Bottineau, Didier. 2015. Les langues naturelles, objets complexes, systèmes simplexes : le cas du basque. In Begioni et Placella (dir.), Problématiques de langues romanes, Linguistique, politique des langues, didactique, culture, Hommages à Alvaro Rocchetti, Linguistica 69, Fasano, Schena Editore, pp. 55-85.
Dahl, Östen. 2004. The Growth and Maintenance of Linguistic Complexity. Amsterdam/Philadelphia, Benjamins.
Do-Hurinville, Danh-Thành, Dao, Huy-Linh (dir.). 2017. La complexité et la comparaison des langues, ÉLA. Études de linguistique appliquée, n°185.
Ehret, Katharina, Berdicevskis, Aleksandrs, Bentz, Christian, and Blumenthal-Dramé, Alice. 2023. Measuring language complexity: challenges and opportunities. Linguistics Vanguard, vol. 9, no. s1, pp. 1-8. https://doi.org/10.1515/lingvan-2022-0133
Ellis, Nick C. & Diane Larsen-Freeman (eds). 2009. Language as a Complex Adaptive System. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.
Glaudert, Nathalie. 2011. La complexité linguistique : essai de théorisation et d’application dans un cadre comparatiste, Université de la Réunion.
Housen, Alex, Kuiken, Folkert, and Vedder, Ineke. (Eds.). 2012. Dimensions of L2 Performance and Proficiency: Complexity, Accuracy and Fluency in SLA. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
Laplantine, Chloé, Joseph, John E., and Aussant, Émilie (dir.) 2023. Simplicité et complexité des langues dans l’histoire des théories linguistiques. Paris : SHESL (HEL Livres, 3).
Larsen-Freeman, Diane, & Cameron, Lynne. 2008. Complex Systems and AppliedLlinguistics. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Lund, Kristine, Basso Fossali, Pierluigi, Mazur, Audrey & Ollagnier-Beldame, Magali (eds.). 2022. Language is a Complex Adaptive System: Explorations and evidence (Conceptual Foundations of Language Science 8). Berlin: Language Science Press.
Martinot, Claire, Bosnjak Botica, Tomislava, Gerolimich, Sonia, and Paprocka-Piotrowska, Urszula (eds.) 2019. Reformulation and Acquisition of Linguistic Complexity. Crosslinguistic perspective. London: ISTE & Wiley.
Sampson, Geoffrey, Gil, David, Trudgill, Peter (dir.). 2009. Language Complexity as an Evolving Variable, Oxford Linguistics.
Trudgill, Peter. 2001. Contact and simplification: Historical baggage and directionality in linguistic change. Language Typology, 5, 371–37.
Second Call for Papers
Workshop on the Future of Event Detection
Miami, USA
November 15 or 16, 2024
(co-located with EMNLP 2024 <https://2024.emnlp.org/>)
https://future-of-event-detection.github.io/
Submission Deadline: Thursday, August 15, 2024 11:59PM AoE
Workshop Description
In recent years, there has been a significant increase in the amount of
publicly generated digital data. One prominent category of this data, and
arguably the largest in terms of daily generation, pertains to various
real-world events, ranging from natural disasters to political occurrences
to sports events. Detecting these events serves various crucial purposes,
including early warning systems, emergency response, situational awareness,
tracking public health trends, and understanding societal shifts, among
others. However, automatic real-time event detection presents intriguing
challenges, primarily stemming from the characteristics of the data. These
challenges include the diversity of public online data (multimodal nature),
the rapid pace at which data is produced (velocity), the sheer volume of
data generated, and the reliability of the data (veracity). Moreover, the
recent advancements in powerful Large Language Models (LLMs) and Generative
AI Systems offer new opportunities to revise event detection pipelines,
enabling novel approaches and applications across various domains. The
workshop focuses on:
-
Looking forward and looking back: The workshop will solicit ideas on how
the field of event detection should evolve over the next twenty years, as
well as solicit papers reflecting on what has worked and not worked in the
field thus far.
-
Expanding Beyond NLP: As noted above, there are many sibling areas that
actively research event detection. Many of these areas have remained siloed
and there is not much cross-communication though they are working on
similar problem areas. This workshop seeks to address this by actively
soliciting research and invited speakers from these areas.
-
Theory to Application: Finally, this workshop will emphasize how event
detection technology can be used in real-world applications.
We will solicit novel papers, including, but not limited to the following
topics:
-
Position and opinion papers on the state and future of event detection
-
Retrospectives
-
Multimodal event detection
-
Large language models (LLMs) and their applications for event detection
and related areas
-
Event detection on non-traditional sources of data
-
Inferring causal, temporal, coreference, and sub-event relations for
events
-
Multilingual event detection
-
Event representation
-
Event ontology
-
Never-ending learning
-
Streaming algorithms for event detection
-
Interpretability of event detection methods
-
Bias detection and mitigation
-
Human-AI Interaction for event detection frameworks
-
Information visualization for events
-
Anomaly detection
-
Practical application of event detection for different domains such as
emergency response
-
Usability of event detection systems
-
Datasets for Event Detection
Important Dates
All deadlines are 11:59 pm UTC-12 (anywhere on Earth).
-
Submission Deadline: Thursday, August 15
-
Notification of Acceptance: Friday, September 20
-
Camera Ready Deadline: Friday, October 4
-
Workshop: either November 15 or 16
Submission Information
We will be using the EMNLP Submission Guidelines
<https://2024.emnlp.org/calls/main_conference_papers/#paper-submission-detai…>
for
the workshop. Authors are invited to submit a full paper of up to 8 pages
of content with unlimited pages for references. We also invite short papers
of up to 4 pages of content, including unlimited pages for references.
Final camera ready versions of accepted papers will be given an additional
page of content to address reviewer comments.
Previously published papers cannot be accepted. The submissions will be
reviewed by the program committee. As reviewing will be blind, please
ensure that papers are anonymous. Self-references that reveal the author's
identity, e.g., "We previously showed (Smith, 1991) ...", should be
avoided. Instead, use citations such as "Smith previously showed (Smith,
1991) ...".
Please note that unlike EMNLP, which uses ARR for submission management, we
will be using the START conference system. The link will be made live when
available.
https://softconf.com/emnlp2024/FuturED/
Organizing Committee
-
Joel Tetreault
<https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=Fn52EXUAAAAJ&hl=en>, Dataminr
-
Thien Huu Nguyen <https://ix.cs.uoregon.edu/~thien/>, University of
Oregon
-
Hemank Lamba <https://sites.google.com/site/hemanklamba/home>, Dataminr
-
Amanda Hughes
<https://cs.byu.edu/department/directory/faculty-directory/amanda-hughes/>,
Brigham Young University
Contact Information
-
Workshop contact email address: futureofeventdetection(a)googlegroup.com
-
Workshop Twitter: @FuturED2024 <https://x.com/FuturED2024>
===============
===============
* We apologize if you receive multiple copies of this Workshop program *
* For the online version of this Call, visit: https://cikm2024.org/workshops/
===============
CIKM 2024: 33rd ACM International Conference on Information and Knowledge Management
Boise, Idaho, USA
October 21–25, 2024
===============
The workshop program of CIKM 2024 has been published. Workshops are planned to take place on 25 October 2024.
Here you can find a summary of each accepted workshop and the website for more information.
Deadlines start on July 29th.
===============
AI Agent for Information Retrieval
===============
The field of information retrieval has significantly transformed with the integration of AI technologies. AI agents, especially those leveraging LLMs and vast computational power, have revolutionized information retrieval, processing, and presentation.
Despite these advancements, challenges such as ensuring relevance and accuracy, mitigating biases, providing real-time responses, and maintaining data security remain.
This workshop is motivated by the need to explore these challenges, share innovative solutions, and discuss future directions.
More information at: https://sites.google.com/view/ai4ir/
===============
DCAI: The 4th International Workshop on Data-Centric AI
===============
Machine learning focuses on developing models for datasets, but real-world data is often messy. Improving the dataset itself can be a better way to enhance performance instead of just improving the models. Data-Centric AI (DCAI) is an emerging field that systematically improves datasets, resulting in significant improvements in ML applications.
This workshop aims to build an interdisciplinary DCAI community to tackle data problems such as collection, labeling, preprocessing, quality evaluation, debt, and governance.
More information at: https://data-centric-ai-dev.github.io/CIKM2024/
===============
GenAI and RAG Systems for Enterprise
===============
Generative AI (GenAI) represented by large language models (LLMs) is revolutionizing the way we approach problem-solving and content creation in various domains. This workshop aims to bring together academic researchers and industrial practitioners who are interested in building GenAI solutions for enterprise AI, with a special focus on RAG systems.
The workshop will provide a platform for sharing the latest research advances, practical experiences, and real-world challenges in this emerging field.
More information at: https://sites.google.com/view/cikm2024-rag/home
===============
Knowledge Graphs for Responsible AI
===============
As AI systems become increasingly sophisticated, including the explosion of Generative AI, there is a growing need to address ethical considerations and potential societal impacts of their uses. The workshop aims to investigate the role of Knowledge Graphs (KGs) in promoting Responsible AI principles and creating a cooperative space for researchers, practitioners, and policymakers to exchange insights and enhance their comprehension of KGs' impact on achieving Responsible AI solutions. It seeks to facilitate collaboration and idea-sharing to advance the understanding of how KGs can contribute to Responsible AI.
More information at: https://deepa-tilwani.github.io/kg-for-responsible-ai-workshop-cikm-2024.gi…
===============
LLMs Beyond the Cutoff
===============
The workshop provides an interdisciplinary forum for discussing the temporal limitations of LLMs and proposing technical solutions of how to apply and develop LLMs beyond their cutoff dates. We explore two prominent scenarios, where contexts tend to evolve faster than the LLMs that are used to analyze them: (1) journalism and (2) industry.
More information at: https://llmsbeyondthecutoff2024.wordpress.com/
===============
The 1st Workshop on Multimodal Search and Recommendations (CIKM MMSR ‘24)
===============
The advent of multimodal LLMs like GPT-4o and Gemini has significantly boosted the potential for multimodal search and recommendations. Traditional search engines rely mainly on textual queries, supplemented by session and geographical data. In contrast, multimodal systems create a shared embedding space for text, images, audio, and more, enabling next-gen customer experiences. These advancements lead to more accurate and personalized recommendations, enhancing user satisfaction and engagement.
More information at: https://cikm-mmsr.github.io/
===============
The 3rd International Workshop on Industrial Recommendation Systems
===============
The gap in constraints and requirements between academic research and industry limits the broad applicability of many of academia’s contributions for industrial recommendation systems. This workshop aspires to bridge this gap by bringing together researchers from both academia and industry. Its goal is to serve as a platform via which academic researchers become aware of the additional factors that may affect the chances of algorithm adoption into real production systems, and the performance of the algorithms if deployed. Industrial researchers will also benefit from sharing the practical frameworks at an industrial level.
More information at: https://irsworkshop.github.io/2024/
===============
The 4th International Workshop on Online and Adaptive Recommender Systems
===============
The international workshop on Online and Adaptive Recommender Systems (OARS) will serve as a platform for publication and discussion of OARS. This workshop will bring together practitioners and researchers from academia and industry to discuss the challenges and approaches to implement OARS algorithms and systems, and improve user experiences by better modeling and responding to user intent.
More information at: https://oars-workshop.github.io/
===============
The 8th Workshop on Graph Techniques for Adversarial Activity Analytics (GTA³ 2024)
===============
Graphs are powerful analytic tools for modeling adversarial activities across a wide range of domains and applications. With the rapid development of generative AI, the lifecycle and throughput of adversarial activities, such as generating attacks or synthesizing deceptive signals, have accelerated significantly.
The purpose of this workshop is to provide a forum to discuss emerging research problems and novel approaches in graph analysis for modeling adversarial activities in the age of generative AI.
More information at: https://gta3.hrl.com/
===============
Trustworthy and Responsible AI for Information and Knowledge Management System
===============
The way research and business manage and utilize knowledge is undergoing a significant transformation, driven by Artificial Intelligence (AI). AI offers a unique solution for organizations struggling with information overload and inefficient knowledge transfer. However, such AI systems solicit a trustworthy and responsible solution that can cater the potential misuse and malfunction.
In this workshop, we aim to gather researchers and engineers from academia and industry to discuss the latest advances for trustworthy and responsible AI solutions for information and knowledge management systems.
More information at: https://responsible-ai.wiki/cikm24/index.html
===============
Workshop on Generative AI for E-Commerce
===============
The “Gen AI for E-commerce” workshop explores the role of Generative Artificial Intelligence in transforming e-commerce through enhanced user experience and operational efficiency. E-commerce companies grapple with multiple challenges such as lack of quality content for products, subpar user experience, sparse datasets...
This workshop will bring together experts from academia and industry to discuss these challenges and opportunities, aiming to showcase case studies, breakthroughs, and insights into practical implementations of Gen AI in e-commerce.
More information at: https://genai-ecommerce.github.io/GenAIECommerce2024
1st Workshop on Multimodal Search and Recommendations (CIKM MMSR ‘24)
Date: October 25, 2024 (Full day workshop)
Venue: ACM CIKM 2024 <https://cikm2024.org/> (Boise, Idaho, United States)
Website: https://cikm-mmsr.github.io/
Organizers: Aditya Chichani, Surya Kallumadi, Tracy Holloway King, Andrei
Lopatenko
Paper submission deadline: August 10, 2024 (23:59 P.M. GMT)
Overview:
The advent of multimodal LLMs like GPT-4o and Gemini has significantly
boosted the potential for multimodal search and recommendations.
Traditional search engines rely mainly on textual queries, supplemented by
session and geographical data. In contrast, multimodal systems create a
shared embedding space for text, images, audio, and more, enabling next-gen
customer experiences. These advancements lead to more accurate and
personalized recommendations, enhancing user satisfaction and engagement.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
Cross-modal retrieval techniques
Strategies for efficiently indexing and retrieving multimodal data.
Approaches to ensure cross-modal retrieval systems can handle
large-scale data.
Development of metrics to measure similarity across different data
modalities.
Applications of Multimodal Search and Recommendations to Verticals (e.g.
E-commerce, real estate)
Implementing and optimizing image-based product searches.
Creating multimodal conversational systems to enhance user experience
and make search more accessible.
Utilizing AR to enhance product discovery and user interaction.
Leveraging multimodal search for efficient customer service and
support.
User-centric design principles for multimodal search interfaces
Best practices for designing user-friendly interfaces that support
multimodal search.
Methods for evaluating the usability of multimodal search interfaces.
Personalizing multimodal search interfaces to individual user
preferences.
Ensuring multimodal search interfaces are accessible to users with
disabilities.
Ethical Considerations and Privacy Implications of Multimodal Search and
Recommendations
Strategies for ensuring user data privacy in multimodal applications.
Identifying and mitigating biases in multimodal algorithms.
Ensuring transparency in how multimodal results are generated and
presented.
Approaches for obtaining and managing user consent for using their
data.
Modeling for Multimodal Search and Discovery
Multi-modal representation learning
Utilizing GPT-4o, Gemini, and other advanced pre-trained multimodal
LLMs
Dimensionality reduction techniques to reduce complexity of
multimodal data.
Techniques for fine-tuning pre-trained vision-language models.
Developing and standardizing metrics to evaluate the performance of
vision-language models in multimodal search.
Submission Instructions:
All papers will be peer-reviewed by the program committee and judged based
on their relevance to the workshop and their potential to generate
discussion. Submissions must be in PDF format, following the latest CEUR
single column format. For instructions and LaTeX/Overleaf/docx templates,
refer to CEUR’s submission guidelines (
https://ceur-ws.org/HOWTOSUBMIT.html#CEURART), reading up to and including
the “License footnote in paper PDFs” section. Use Emphasizing Capitalized
Style for Paper Titles.
Submissions must describe original work not previously published, not
accepted for publication, and not under review elsewhere. All submissions
must be in English. The workshop follows a single-blind review process and
does not accept anonymous submissions. At least one author of each accepted
paper must register for the workshop and present the paper.
Long paper limit: 15 pages.
Short paper limit: 8 pages.
References are not counted in the page limit.
Submit to CIKM MMSR’24:
https://openreview.net/group?id=ACM.org/CIKM/2024/Workshop/MMSR
Contact: Aditya Chichani
E-mail: aditya_chichani(a)berkeley.edu
Deadline extended: 31 July 2024
TRANSLATING AND THE COMPUTER CONFERENCE 2024 (TC46) - Call for
Presentations and Papers
https://asling.org/tc46/call-for-papers-cfp/
"Navigating the future of language: Innovation, integration,
inspiration"
Embracing innovation in language technologies - From AI to traditional
practices -, TC46 welcomes submissions on a broad spectrum of topics
related to language technologies in the provision of language services.
While there is a special emphasis on the advancements and implications
of AI and Generative AI, we strongly encourage contributions that cover
a wide range of interests and perspectives in the language services
field. Whether you are deeply involved in AI-driven projects or are
focused on traditional or emerging practices independent of AI, your
insights are invaluable.
1. Deadline for submitting proposals for full length talks (academic
and user-experience) and short/Poster talks for TC46 is extended to 31
July
2. Deadline for submitting proposals for workshops and panels is
extended to 15 August
https://asling.org/tc46/call-for-papers-cfp/
Second Call for Main Conference Papers (COLING 2025)
Important Dates
All deadlines are 11:59PM UTC-12:00 (“anywhere on Earth”).
Deadline for direct submissions September 16, 2024
Commitment deadline for ARR papers October 20, 2024
Author rebuttal phase (for direct submissions) October 30 - November 1, 2024
Notification of acceptance for COLING 2025 November 29, 2024
Tutorials and Workshops January 19-20, 2025
Main Conference January 21-24, 2025
---------- CFP:
The 31st International Conference on Computational Linguistics (COLING 2025) will take place in Abu Dhabi, UAE, January 19-24 2025. COLING 2025 invites the submission of long and short papers featuring substantial, original, and unpublished research in all aspects of Computational Linguistics and Natural Language Processing.
Relevant topics include, but are not limited to, the following areas:
Dialogue and Interactive Systems
Discourse and Pragmatics
Document Classification and Topic Modeling
Ethics, Bias, and Fairness
Information Extraction
Information Retrieval and Text Mining
Interpretability and Analysis of Models for NLP
Language Modeling
Language Resources and Evaluation
Linguistic Insights Derived using Computational Techniques
Linguistic Theories, Cognitive Modeling and Psycholinguistics
Low-Resource and Efficient Methods for NLP
Machine Learning for Computational Linguistics and NLP
Machine Translation and Translation Aids
Multilingualism and Language Diversity
Multimodal and Grounded Language Acquisition
NLP and LLM Applications (such as Education, Healthcare, Finance, Legal NLP, Computational Social Science, etc.)
Natural Language Generation
Offensive Speech Detection and Analysis
Phonology, Morphology and Word Segmentation
Question Answering
Lexical Semantics
Sentence-level Semantics (Textual Inference, Paraphrasing, etc)
Sentiment Analysis, Stylistic Analysis, Opinion and Argument Mining
Speech Recognition and Synthesis, and Spoken Language Understanding
Summarization and Simplification
Syntactic analysis (Tagging, Chunking, Parsing)
Vision and Robotics
Papers targeting any of these topics from the perspective of the Sustainability Goals of the UN are especially welcome.
Submission Details
COLING 2025 invites the submission of long papers of up to eight pages and short papers of up to four pages. These page limits only apply to the main body of the paper. At the end of the paper (after the conclusions but before the references) papers need to include a mandatory section discussing the limitations of the work and, optionally, a section discussing ethical considerations. Papers can include unlimited pages of references and an unlimited appendix. Authors should follow the general instructions for COLING 2025 proceedings, which are an adaptation of the general instructions for *ACL proceedings.
To prepare your submission, please make sure to use the COLING 2025 style files available here:
LaTeX
Word
Overleaf
Papers deviating from the provided style files will be rejected without review.
COLING 2025 adopts the ACL Ethics Policy.
There are two routes for paper submission:
Direct submission
Papers should be submitted through Softconf/START using the following link: https://softconf.com/coling2025/papers/
Each paper will receive a minimum of three reviews. Authors will have the opportunity to provide a short rebuttal to clarify any misunderstandings. The review process will be double-blind. Reviewers will not see authors, authors will not see reviewers. Reviews and submissions will not be made publicly visible.
ACL Rolling Review (ARR) Papers
Papers which have already been reviewed through the ACL Rolling Review (ARR) system can be committed to COLING 2025. These papers will not be re-reviewed. Senior Area Chairs and Program Chairs will make acceptance decisions based on the ARR reviews and meta-reviews.
Optional Supplementary Materials: Appendices, Software and Data
Each COLING 2025 submission can be accompanied by a single .tgz or .zip archive containing supplementary materials, such as program code and datasets. COLING 2025 encourages the submission of such supplementary materials to improve the reproducibility of results. For the main track, the supplementary materials need to be fully anonymized to preserve the double-blind reviewing policy.
Additional information, such as preprocessing decisions, model parameters or proofs should be put into the appendix of the main PDF submission. Note that submissions need to remain fully self-contained. In particular, any details that are important for reviewers to assess the technical correctness of the work should be included in the main body of the paper.
Anonymity Period
COLING 2025 will follow the ACL Anonymity Policy. As a result, no anonymity period will be required, although authors are still cautioned against extensive advertising. The submissions themselves must still be fully anonymized.
Multiple Submission Policy
Papers which are submitted to COLING 2025 cannot be under review for other conferences or journals at the same time. The commitment process is treated as being under review for a conference. Authors can either commit their paper through ARR or directly submit it to the conference. Papers reviewed and committed to the conference through ARR cannot be submitted directly to the conference. In addition, we will not consider any paper that overlaps significantly in content or results with papers that will be (or have been) published elsewhere. Submissions that violate these requirements will be desk rejected.
General chairs,
Owen Rambow, Stony Brook University
Leo Wanner, ICREA, Pompeu Fabra University
Program co-chairs
Marianna Apidianaki, University of Pennsylvania
Hend Al-Khalifa, King Saud University
Barbara Di Eugenio, University of Illinois Chicago
Steven Schockaert, Cardiff University
For questions about submissions: coling2025-programchairs(a)googlegroups.com