ACL 2025 Call for Papers
Main Conference
ACL 2025
Website: https://2025.aclweb.org/
Submission Deadline: February 15, 2025
Conference Dates: July 27 to August 1, 2025
Location: Vienna, Austria
Special Theme: “Generalization of NLP Models”
Contact:
Roberto Navigli (General Chair)
Wanxiang Che, Joyce Nabende, Mohammad Taher Pilehvar, Ekaterina Shutova
(Program Chairs)
Overview
ACL 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substantial, original, and unpublished research in all aspects of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.
ACL 2025 has a goal of a diverse technical program—in addition to
traditional research results, papers may contribute negative findings,
survey an area, announce the creation of a new resource, argue a
position, report novel linguistic insights derived using existing
computational techniques, and reproduce, or fail to reproduce, previous
results. As in recent years, some of the presentations at the conference
will be of papers accepted by the Transactions of the ACL (TACL) and by
the Computational Linguistics (CL) journals.
Papers submitted to ACL 2025, but not selected for the main conference,
will also automatically be considered for publication in the Findings of
the Association of Computational Linguistics.
Paper Submission Information
Papers may be submitted to the ARR 2025 February cycle. Papers that have
received reviews and a meta-review from ARR (whether from the ARR 2025
February cycle or an earlier ARR cycle) may be committed to ACL 2025 via
the conference commitment site (TBA).
Submission Topics
ACL 2025 aims to have a broad technical program. Relevant topics for the
conference include, but are not limited to, the following areas (in
alphabetical order):
Computational Social Science and Cultural Analytics
Dialogue and Interactive Systems
Discourse and Pragmatics
Efficient/Low-Resource Methods for NLP
Ethics, Bias, and Fairness
Generation
Human-centered NLP
Information Extraction
Information Retrieval and Text Mining
Interpretability and Analysis of Models for NLP
Language Modeling
Linguistic theories, Cognitive Modeling and Psycholinguistics
Machine Learning for NLP
Machine Translation
Multilinguality and Language Diversity
Multimodality and Language Grounding to Vision, Robotics and Beyond
NLP Applications
Phonology, Morphology and Word Segmentation
Question Answering
Resources and Evaluation
Semantics: Lexical and Sentence-Level
Sentiment Analysis, Stylistic Analysis, and Argument Mining
Speech recognition, text-to-speech and spoken language understanding
Summarization
Syntax: Tagging, Chunking and Parsing
Special Theme: Generalization of NLP Models
ACL 2025 Theme Track: Generalization of NLP Models
Following the success of the ACL 2020-2024 Theme tracks, we are happy to
announce that ACL 2025 will have a new theme with the goal of reflecting
and stimulating discussion about the current state of development of the
field of NLP.
Generalization is crucial for ensuring that models behave robustly,
reliably, and fairly when making predictions on data different from
their training data. Achieving good generalization is critically
important for models used in real-world applications, as they should
emulate human-like behavior. Humans are known for their ability to
generalize well, and models should aspire to this standard.
The theme track invites empirical and theoretical research and position
and survey papers reflecting on the Generalization of NLP Models. The
possible topics of discussion include (but are not limited to) the
following:
How can we enhance the generalization of NLP models across various
dimensions—compositional, structural, cross-task, cross-lingual,
cross-domain, and robustness?
What factors affect the generalization of NLP models?
What are the most effective methods for evaluating the
generalization capabilities of NLP models?
While Large Language Models (LLMs) significantly enhance the
generalization of NLP models, what are the key limitations of LLMs in
this regard?
The theme track submissions can be either long or short.
We anticipate having a special session for this theme at the conference
and a Thematic Paper Award in addition to other categories of awards.
Two-Stage Review: Submission to ARR, Commitment to ACL 2025
ACL 2025 will use ACL Rolling Review (ARR) as a reviewing system, but
final decisions will be made by the conference. Both submissions of
articles for review and commitment of reviewed articles to the
conference will be performed via the Open Review platform.
Specifically, authors will follow a two-step process:
Authors submit articles to ARR, where submissions receive reviews
and meta-reviews from ARR reviewers and area chairs;
Authors commit their reviewed articles to a publication venue (e.g.,
ACL 2025), where Senior Area Chairs and Program Chairs make acceptance
decisions from the ARR reviews and meta-reviews.
ACL 2025 has chosen this approach in coordination with *CL 2024
conferences, which are adopting the same procedure and a coordinated
submission plan to allow maximum flexibility during their submission
periods for the authors.
At each cycle, after a paper has been fully reviewed, authors have the
option to commit their paper to a conference or revise and resubmit for
another round of reviews.
The reviewing process will continue to be double-blind. Reviewers will
not see authors, nor will authors see reviewers, and reviews on ARR will
not be made publicly visible. However, authors will be given the option
through ARR to make their anonymized submitted articles publicly
visible.
Mandatory Reviewing Workload
As the pace of research in the field continues to increase, we need to
strengthen the commitment to reviewing for each paper submission. During
the ARR submission process, authors will be required to specify which
co-authors are committing to cover reviewing in this reviewing cycle.
Please see the new ARR policy regarding reviewing workload here. As
this is an ARR-wide policy for all
*CL conferences, questions or clarifications should be addressed to ARR
directly.
Important Dates:
Submission deadline (all papers are submitted to ARR): February 15,
2025
ARR reviews & meta-reviews available to authors of the February
cycle: April 15, 2025
Commitment deadline for ACL 2025: April 20, 2025
Notification of acceptance: May 15, 2025
Withdrawal deadline: May 30, 2025
Camera-ready papers due: May 30, 2025
Tutorials: July 27, 2025
Conference: July 28 - 30, 2025
Workshops: July 31 - August 1, 2025
Note: All deadlines are 11:59PM UTC-12:00 (“anywhere on Earth”).
Paper Submission Details
Both long and short paper submissions should follow all of the ARR
submission requirements at https://aclrollingreview.org/cfp, including:
Long Papers (8 pages) and Short Papers (4 pages):
Instructions for Two-Way Anonymized Review:
Authorship
Citation and Comparison
Multiple Submission Policy, Resubmission Policy, and Withdrawal
Policy
Ethics Policy including the responsible NLP research checklist
Limitations
Paper Submission and Templates
Optional Supplementary Materials
Final versions of accepted papers will be given one additional page of
content (up to 9 pages for long papers, up to 5 pages for short papers)
to address reviewers’ comments.
Following the ACL and ARR policies, there is no anonymity period
requirement.
At the time of submission to ARR, authors will be asked to select a
preferred venue (e.g., ACL 2025). This is used only to calculate
acceptance rates. Authors who selected ACL 2025 as a preferred venue
when submitting to ARR may choose not to commit to ACL 2025 after
receiving their reviews, and authors who selected a preferred venue
other than ACL 2025 when submitting to ARR are still welcome to commit
to ACL 2025.
Presentation at the Conference
All accepted papers must be presented at the conference to appear in the
proceedings. The conference will include both in-person and virtual
presentation options. Papers without at least one presenting author
registered by the early registration deadline may be subject to desk
rejection.
Long and short papers will be presented orally or as posters as
determined by the program committee. While short papers will be
distinguished from long papers in the proceedings, there will be no
distinction in the proceedings between papers presented orally and
papers presented as posters.
Dear all,
Today, the data freeze of the MultiLexNorm 2 shared task is in effect.
As defined in the previous iteration of the task, lexical normalization is:
The task of transforming an utterance into its standard form, word by word,
including both one-to-many (1-n) and many-to-one (n-1) replacements.
This time, the focus is on non-Indo-European languages. We have manged
to obtain (new) datasets for: Thai, Vietnamese, Indonesian, Japanese, and
Korean.
More information can be found on: https://noisy-text.github.io/2025/multi-lexnorm.html#
Deadlines:
Data available: Nov 15, 2024
Data freeze: Jan 14, 2025
Test data: Jan 25, 2025
Final Evaluation: Feb 07, 2025
Paper deadline: Feb 25, 2025
Paper reviewed: Mar 01, 2025
Camera ready: Mar 10, 2025
Workshop: May 03, 2025 (TBD)
Best,
The organizers
*Call for Participation*
*First workshop on Challenges in Processing South Asian Languages (CHiPSAL
2025)Co-located with the 31st International Conference on Computational
Linguistics (COLING 2025)*
*Virtual*
*January 19, 2025 8.30 AM - 3.00 PM (GMT +4)*
*Accepted papers - *https://sites.google.com/view/chipsal/accepted-papers
*W**orkshop program** -*
https://sites.google.com/view/chipsal/workshop-program
*Workshop Website - https://sites.google.com/view/chipsal/
<https://sites.google.com/view/chipsal/>*
Please join us!
We are excited to engage with the research community in advancing NLP for
South Asian languages and fostering meaningful collaborations.
*Why CHiPSAL?*
South Asia, with over 1.97 billion people, is one of the most
linguistically diverse regions globally, home to 700+ languages and 25+
major scripts. This region is rich in cultural and linguistic heritage but
faces significant challenges in natural language processing (NLP). These
include encoding and orthographic issues, resource constraints, linguistic
complexities, dialectal diversity, and more. *CHiPSAL* addresses these
challenges and advances NLP research for South Asian languages while
fostering collaborations across linguistic, technical, and cultural domains.
*Organizing Chairs:*
Kengatharaiyer Sarveswaran, University of Jaffna, Jaffna, Sri Lanka
Ashwini Vaidya, Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi, India
Bal Krishna Bal, Kathmandu University, Kathmandu, Nepal
Sana Shams, University of Engineering and Technology, Lahore, Pakistan
Surendrabikram Thapa, Virginia Tech, USA
*Program Committee Members (alphabetical order):*A M Abirami, Thiagarajar
College of Engineering, India.
Abhai Pratap Singh, Amazon, USA.
Akaash Vishal Hazarika, Splunk, USA.
Aloka Fernando, University of Moratuwa, Sri Lanka.
Aman Shakya,Institute of Engineering, Pulchowk, Tribhuvan University, Nepal.
Anitha Dhakshina Moorthy, Thiagarajar College of Engineering, India.
Ann Sinthusha Anton Vijeevaraj, University of Vavuniya, Sri Lanka.
Annette Hautli-Janisz, University of Passau, Germany.
Ashwini Vaidya, IIT Delhi, India.
Bal Krishna Bal, Kathmandu University, Nepal.
Balaram Prasain, Tribhuvan University, Nepal.
Bareera Sadia, Al-Khawarizmi Institute of Computer Science, UET, Lahore
Pakistan.
Brinda Gurusamy, Cisco, USA.
Buddhika Karunarathne, University of Moratuwa, Sri Lanka.
Eugene Y A Charles, University of Jaffna, Sri Lanka.
Farah Adeeba, University of Engineering and Technology, KSK, Pakistan.
Farhan Jafri, Jamia Millia Islamia, India.
Gihan Dias, University of Moratuwa, Sri Lanka.
H N D Thilini, University of Colombo School of Computing, Sri Lanka.
Hariram Veeramani, UCLA, USA.
Hassan Sajjad, Dalhousie University, Canada.
Jayeeta Putatunda, Fitch Ratings, USA.
Kengatharaiyer Sarveswaran, University of Jaffna, Sri Lanka.
Krishna Chalise, Tribhuvan University, Nepal.
Kritesh Rauniyar, IIMS College, Nepal.
Lekhnath Pathak, Tribhuvan University, Nepal.
Lynnette Hui Xian Ng, CMU, USA.
Mahak Shah, Columbia University, USA.
Manjunath Chandrashekaraiah, Astera Labs, USA.
Menan Velayuthan, University of Moratuwa, Sri Lanka.
Munief Tahir, Al-Khawarizmi Institute of Computer Science, UET, Lahore
Pakistan.
Parameswari Krishnamurthy,IIIT Hyderabad, India.
Paritosh Katre, PayPal, USA.
Prakash Poudyal, Kathmandu University, Nepal.
Preetish Kakkar, Adobe, USA.
Qurat-ul-Ain Akram, University of Engineering and Technology, KSK, Pakistan.
Randil Pushpananda, University of Colombo School of Computing, Sri Lanka.
Sahar Rauf, Al-Khawarizmi Institute of Computer Science, UET, Lahore
Pakistan.
Sana Shams, Al-Khawarizmi Institute of Computer Science, UET, Lahore
Pakistan.
Shuvam Shiwakoti, Virginia Tech, USA.
Siddhant Bikram Shah, Northeastern University, USA.
Sinnathamby Mahesan, University of Jaffna, Sri Lanka.
Suganya Ramamoorthy, Vellore Institute of Technology University, India.
Surabhi Adhikari, Columbia University, USA.
Surangika Ranathunga, Massey University, New Zealand.
Surendrabikram Thapa, Virginia Tech, USA.
Tafseer Ahmed, Alexa Translations, Canada.
Toqeer Ehsan, Mohamed bin Zayed University of Artificial Intelligence,
United Arab Emirates.
Usman Naseem, Macquarie University, Australia.
Uthayasanker Thayasivam, University of Moratuwa, Sri Lanka.
Vijayrajsinh Gohil, New York University, USA.
*Volunteers (alphabetical order):*
Ahrane Mahaganapathy, University of Jaffna, Sri Lanka.
Menan Velayuthan, University of Moratuwa, Sri Lanka.
Suthakar Sivashanth, University of Jaffna, Sri Lanka.
Thank you
--
*Dr Kengatharaiyer Sarveswaran (Sarves)*
Senior Lecturer (Grade-I) in Computer Science
Department of Computer Science
Faculty of Science
University of Jaffna
Sri Lanka
sarves.github.io
The 4th Workshop on Arabic Corpus Linguistics (WACL-4) [1]
WACL4 AT COLING’2025
WITH FOCUS ON ARABIC DIALECTS
The field of Arabic language research using corpora and corpus methods
has experienced significant growth and development in recent years. What
once were isolated efforts have now transformed into a vibrant and
expansive area of study, advancing rapidly across multiple dimensions in
both corpus and computational linguistics. Building upon the success of
previous editions--WACL-1 in 2011, WACL-2 in 2013 in conjunction with
the Corpus Linguistics Conference at Lancaster University, and WACL-3 in
2019 at the Corpus Linguistics 2019 conference at Cardiff University--we
are excited to announce the fourth edition of the Workshop on Arabic
Corpus Linguistics (WACL-4).
The primary objectives of WACL-4 are to highlight the latest
developments in the creation, annotation, and application of Arabic
corpora, including the introduction of new corpora and advancements in
annotation techniques, while fostering collaboration among researchers
from diverse institutions and regions to stimulate joint research
projects and interdisciplinary initiatives. This edition will place a
special emphasis on the study of Arabic dialects, including non-standard
and regional varieties, to broaden the understanding of Arabic in its
various manifestations and support research on under-resourced
linguistic varieties. Additionally, WACL-4 aims to encourage the
development and refinement of Natural Language Processing (NLP) systems
and tools tailored for Arabic, integrating corpora into NLP workflows,
creating new computational tools, and evaluating existing systems to
improve their efficacy in processing Arabic text.
The workshop will be held online on January 20th, 2025 in conjunction
with the 31st edition of COLING in 2025 in Abu Dhabi (UAE).
We are pleased to share the programme of WACL4 2025 with you.
Please visit:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1SSNC1r4dx023cb_FuQWhWa8d3Si4fvvp/view?usp=…
To register for the workshop, please visit
https://coling2025.org/registration/
We are looking forward to welcoming you at WACL4 at COLING'2025
Kind regards,
WACL4 Organising Committee
--
Amal Haddad Haddad (She/her)
Facultad de Traducción e Interpretación
Universidad de Granada |https://www.ugr.es/personal/amal-haddad-haddad
Lexicon Research Group |http://lexicon.ugr.es/haddad
Co-Convenor, BAAL SIG 'Humans, Machines,
Language'|https://r.jyu.fi/humala
Event Coordinator, BAAL SIG 'Language, Learning and Teaching'
===============
Cláusula de Confidencialidad: "Este mensaje se dirige exclusivamente a
su destinatario y puede contener información privilegiada o
confidencial. Si no es Ud. el destinatario indicado, queda notificado de
que la utilización, divulgación o copia sin autorización está prohibida
en virtud de la legislación vigente. Si ha recibido este mensaje por
error, se ruega lo comunique inmediatamente por esta misma vía y proceda
a su destrucción.
This message is intended exclusively for its addressee and may contain
information that is CONFIDENTIAL and protected by professional
privilege. If you are not the intended recipient you are hereby notified
that any dissemination, copy or disclosure of this communication is
strictly prohibited by law. If this message has been received in error,
please immediately notify us via e-mail and delete it"
===============
Links:
------
[1] https://wp.lancs.ac.uk/wacl4
++ 1st reminder to participate in our web survey on data annotation bottlenecks and active learning; apologies for cross-posting ++
Dear list members,
We invite you to participate in our web survey exploring how recent advancements in NLP, such as LLMs, have changed the need for labeled data in Supervised Machine Learning.
Survey details:
* Topic: Web survey on Data Annotation and Active Learning
* Target group: Researchers and practitioners alike in the fields of NLP, Supervised Machine Learning, and Active Learning in particular (knowledge of Active Learning is not required)
* Duration: 5-15 minutes
* Deadline for participation: January 12, 2025
* Survey link: https://bildungsportal.sachsen.de/umfragen/limesurvey/index.php/538271
Why should I invest my time in this survey?
* Make an impact: Participate in a community-effort and help to gain a better understanding of the current state and open issues on methods that are used to overcome a lack of labeled data.
* Gain insights: Receive a report with key findings to incorporate these insights into research and development of new methods and technologies.
Thank you for considering participating in our survey!
If you have any questions or require additional information, please don't hesitate to contact us directly at activelearningsurvey2024(a)gmail.com<mailto:activeLearningSurvey2024@gmail.com>.
If you know colleagues or peers who might be interested, we'd be grateful if you could forward this survey to them as well.
Best regards,
Julia Romberg (GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany)
Christopher Schröder (Institut für Angewandte Informatik e. V., Germany)
Julius Gonsior (TUD Dresden University of Technology)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[gesis-logo-new-50-50]
Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences
Julia Romberg
Computational Social Science, Team Data Science Methods
+49(221)47694-742
Dear colleagues
Please forward this email to anyone you think might be interested in a PhD studentship focused on discovering drivers of child language development from videos/multimodal transcripts of early child-parent/educator interactions:
https://www.findaphd.com/phds/project/identifying-drivers-of-language-devel…
The student will be based at the University of Manchester in the UK, but will spend at least 12 months at the University of Melbourne, Australia.
Best,
Colin
Neural language models have revolutionised natural language processing (NLP) and have provided state-of-the-art results for many tasks. However, their effectiveness is largely dependent on the pre-training resources. Therefore, language models (LMs) often struggle with low-resource languages in both training and evaluation. Recently, there has been a growing trend in developing and adopting LMs for low-resource languages. LoResLM aims to provide a forum for researchers to share and discuss their ongoing work on LMs for low-resource languages.
LoResLM 2025 will be a physical workshop co-located with COLING 2025, Abu Dhabi on 20th January 2025.
We are pleased to share the programme of LoResLM 2025 with you. Please visit https://loreslm.github.io/program for the full programme.
To register for the workshop, please visit https://coling2025.org/registration/
We are looking forward to welcoming you at LoResLM 2025 in Abu Dhabi.
The workshop is supported in part by CLARIN-UK, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council as part of the Infrastructure for Digital Arts and Humanities programme.
>> Keynote Speaker
Jose Camacho-Collados, Cardiff University.
Title - "Multilinguality and Cultural Awareness in Language Models"
>> Organising Committee
Hansi Hettiarachchi, Lancaster University, UK
Tharindu Ranasinghe, Lancaster University, UK
Paul Rayson, Lancaster University, UK
Ruslan Mitkov, Lancaster University, UK
Mohamed Gaber, Birmingham City University, UK
Damith Premasiri, Lancaster University, UK
Fiona Anting Tan, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Lasitha Uyangodage, University of Münster, Germany
>> Programme Committee
Gábor Bella - IMT Atlantique, France
Samuel Cahyawijaya - The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong
Burcu Can - University of Stirling, UK
Çağrı Çöltekin - University of Tübingen, Germany
Raj Dabre - National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Japan
Vera Danilova - Uppsala University, Sweden
Debashish Das - Birmingham City University, UK
Ona de Gibert - University of Helsinki, Finland
Alphaeus Dmonte - George Mason University, USA
Bonaventure F. P. Dossou - McGill University, Canada
Daan van Esch - Google
Ignatius Ezeani - Lancaster University, UK
Anna Furtado - University of Galway, Ireland
Amal Htait - Aston University, UK
Ali Hürriyetoğlu - Wageningen University & Research, Netherlands
Danka Jokic - University of Belgrade, Serbia
Diptesh Kanojia - University of Surrey, UK
Daisy Lal - Lancaster University, UK
Colin Leong - University of Dayton, USA
Veronika Lipp - Hungarian Research Centre for Linguistics, Hungary
Muhidin Mohamed - Aston University, UK
Farhad Nooralahzadeh - University of Zurich, Switzerland
Rrubaa Panchendrarajan - Queen Mary University of London, UK
Nadeesha Pathirana - Aston University, UK
Alistair Plum - University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg
Nishat Raihan - George Mason University, USA
Omid Rohanian - University of Oxford, UK
Sandaru Seneviratne - Australian National University, Australia
Ravi Shekhar - University of Essex, UK
Archchana Sindhujan - University of Surrey, UK
Claytone Sikasote - University of Cape Town, South Africa
Marjana Prifti Skenduli - University of New York Tirana, Albania
Uthayasanker Thayasivam - University of Moratuwa, Sri Lanka
Taro Watanabe - Nara Institute of Science and Technology, Japan
Edlira Vakaj - Birmingham City University, UK
John Vidler - Lancaster University, UK
Phil Weber - Aston University, UK
Bryan Wilie - Hong Kong University of Science & Technology, Hong Kong
Artūrs Znotiņš - University of Latvia, Latvia
URL - https://loreslm.github.io/
Twitter - https://x.com/LoResLM2025
LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/loreslm/
Hello,
We are hiring 2 PhD students to work on combining language models with
structured data, starting from September 2025, at Telecom Paris,
Institut Polytechnique de Paris.
Large Language Models are amazing, and with our research project, we aim
to make them even more amazing! Our project will connect large language
models to structured knowledge such as knowledge bases or databases.
With this,
1. language models will stop hallucinating
2. language models can be audited and updated reliably
3. language models will become smaller and thus more eco-friendly and
deployable
We work in the DIG team at Telecom Paris, one of the finest engineering
schools in France, and part of Institute Polytechnique de Paris — ranked
38th in the world by the QS ranking. The institute is 45 min away from
Paris by public transport, and located in the green of the Plateau de
Saclay.
Excited about joining us? Tick these boxes:
1. Have a good background in natural language processing, machine
learning, and knowledge representation
2. Have a master's degree (or equivalent)
3. Be of European nationality (imposed by our sponsor, the French
Ministry of Armed Forces)
Check out our Web site to apply:
https://suchanek.name/work/research/kb-lm/index.html
Fabian Suchanek & Nils Holzenberger
Dear all,
The end of 2024 has been very active at EURALEX, for example you can now find EURALEX 2024 proceedings on the website (they have already been indexed by SCOPUS), and the videorecordings from the 2024 Congress (presentations and pre-conference workshops) have been made available at the Videolectures website (https://videolectures.net/events/euralex2024_cavtat).
We are now pleased to announce the launch of our new webinar series.
EURALEX Talks is a series of online webinars featuring invited experts in the field of lexicography. These sessions are free and open to everyone. They explore a wide variety of topics related to language and lexicography. Each talk lasts approximately 40 minutes, followed by questions and discussion. Join us on Tuesday 28 January 2025 at 16.00 (CET) for our first talk, which will be given by Pamela Faber. Zoom link: https://uni-lj-si.zoom.us/j/8569694820.
The Language of Love Fraud: Frames of Deception
The language of love fraud is a unique example of an online linguistic deception. Using a fabricated identity, the fraudster creates the illusion of a romantic relationship between himself and the victim, solely through language. This deception is often successful because of the fraudster’s lexical choices (soulmate, cherish, adore, sacred vow, etc.) which override his flawed syntax and activate a frame of romantic love in her mind.
Biodata
Pamela Faber is Professor Emeritus in Translation and Interpreting at the University of Granada (Spain). She is the founder of the LexiCon research group, with whom she has carried out various nationally-funded research projects on Frame-Based Terminology, the approach to terminology that she created and developed. One of the results of these projects is EcoLexicon (ecolexicon.ugr.es), a terminological knowledge base on environmental science. She has more than 150 articles, book chapters, and books, which have inspired researchers throughout the world to explore specialized knowledge from a frame-based perspective.
Looking forward to seeing you online. Please forward the announcement to other mailing lists and colleagues who might be interested.
Best wishes
Iztok Kosem
EURALEX President
Apologies for cross-posting.
----------------------------------------
*The International Conference on Spoken Language Translation*
ACL – 22nd* IWSLT 2025 – **S**econd** Call for Participation*
*31 July-1 August 2025 - Vienna, Austria*
http://iwslt.org
The International Conference on Spoken Language Translation (IWSLT)
<https://iwslt.org/> is the premier annual conference for all aspects of
Spoken Language Translation. Every year, the conference organises and
sponsors open evaluation campaigns around key challenges in simultaneous
and consecutive translation, under real-time/low latency or offline
conditions and under low-resource or multilingual constraints. System
descriptions and results from participants’ systems and scientific papers
related to key algorithmic advances and best practices are presented.
IWSLT is the venue of the SIGSLTs <https://iwslt.org/sigslt/>, the Special
Interest Group on Spoken Language Translation <https://iwslt.org/sigslt/>
of ACL <https://www.aclweb.org/portal/>, ISCA <https://www.isca-speech.org/>
and ELRA <https://www.elra.info/>. With a track record of 21 years, IWSLT
benchmarks and proceedings serve as reference for all researchers and
practitioners working on speech translation and related fields.
The 22nd edition of IWSLT will be run as a hybrid ELRA
<https://www.elra.info/>/ACL <https://www.aclweb.org/portal/> event,
co-located with ACL 2025 <https://2025.aclweb.org/> from 31 July to 1
August 2025.
*Important Dates*
*January 1, 2025*: Release of shared task training and dev data
*March 15, 2025*: Scientific paper submission deadline
*Apr 1-15, 2025*: Evaluation period
*April 21, 2025*: System description paper submission deadline
*May 15, 2025*: Notification of acceptance
*June 1, 2025*: Camera-ready deadline (all paper)
*July 31-Aug 1*, *2025*: IWSLT conference
Evaluation
The IWSLT 2025 features shared tasks <https://iwslt.org/2025/#shared-tasks>
that address the following focus areas:
- High-resource ST: Offline track, Simultaneous track, Subtitling track
- Low-resource ST: Low-resource and Indic (multilingual) tracks
- Instruction-following Speech Processing track: Technical domain ST, ASR,
Summarization, and QA
Training and development data for each shared task will be prepared and
released by the respective organisers (for further information on this
initiative, please refer to the IWSLT website <https://iwslt.org/2025/>).
Participants will receive instructions about how to submit their runs. In
addition, participants have the opportunity to present their work
through a system
paper that will be published in the ACL Proceedings.
Conference
IWSLT also invites submissions of scientific papers to be published in the
ACL Proceedings and presented either in oral or poster format. The
conference selects high-quality, original contributions on theoretical and
practical issues of spoken language translation research, technologies and
applications. Submissions will be accepted directly through the IWSLT
submission site (to be announced on the website <https://iwslt.org/2025/>).
We will also accept commitments of submissions with reviews from the ACL
Rolling Review.
Additionally, to foster cross-pollination of ideas, the conference also
invites the presentation of papers on speech translation recently published
elsewhere. Please note that this is for non-archival presentation of papers
relevant to speech translation already published in other venues (e.g.,
Findings for the *ACL, speech, NLP or MT conferences). Submissions for this
category will be accepted through a dedicated form (to be announced on the
website <https://iwslt.org/2025/>). Papers will be checked for relevance to
IWSLT, and assigned either oral or poster presentation slots if selected.
Contact
Please email iwslt-evaluation-campaign(a)googlegroups.com if you have any
questions related to the shared tasks.
Thanks,
Marine, Marcello, Alex, Jan, Sebastian, Elizabeth, Atul
(IWSLT organisers)