Call For Papers - SIGIR eCom'24 - https://sigir-ecom.github.io/
The SIGIR Workshop on eCommerce will serve as a platform for publication
and discussion of Information Retrieval, NLP and Vision research relative
to their applications in the domain of eCommerce. This workshop will bring
together practitioners and researchers from academia and industry to
discuss the challenges and approaches to product search and recommendation
in eCommerce. The deadline for paper submission is April 25, 2024 (11:59
P.M. AoE)
The special theme of this year's workshop is eCommerce Search in the Age of
Generative AI and LLMs.
The workshop will also include a data challenge. This year we will
collaborate with TREC on a product search data challenge (
https://trec-product-search.github.io/index.html). The overarching goal is
to study how end-to-end retrieval systems can be built and evaluated given
a large set of products. The data challenge provides a corpus of products
and a set of user intents (queries): the goal is to find the product that
suits the user’s needs.
SIGIR eCom is a full day workshop taking place on Thursday, July 18, 2024
in conjunction with SIGIR 2024. SIGIR eCom'24 will be an in-person workshop.
________________
Important Dates:
Paper submission deadline - April 25, 2024 (11:59 P.M. AoE)
Notification of acceptance - May 23, 2024
Camera Ready Version of Papers Due - June 24, 2024
SIGIR eCom Full day Workshop - July 18, 2024
We invite quality research contributions, position and opinion papers
addressing relevant challenges in the domain of eCommerce. We invite
submission of both papers and posters. All submitted papers and posters
will be single-blind and will be peer reviewed by an international program
committee of researchers of high repute. Accepted submissions will be
presented at the workshop.
Topics:
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
-
eCommerce search in the age of Generative AI and LLMs (2024 special
theme)
-
Ranking and Whole Page Relevance
-
Optimization for IR and business metrics
-
Diversity in product search and recommendations
-
Relevance models for multi-faceted entities
-
Relevance vs. revenue
-
Deterministic sorts (e.g. price low to high)
-
Temporal dynamics and seasonality
-
Query and Document Understanding
-
Query intent, query suggestions, and auto-completion
-
Strategies for resolving low or zero recall queries
-
Converting across modalities (e.g., text, structured data, images)
-
Categorization and facets
-
Reviews and sentiment analysis
-
Recommendation and Personalization
-
Personalization & contextualization, including the use of personal
facets such as age, gender, location
-
Privacy, bias and ethics in eCommerce IR
-
Blending recommendations and search results
-
Representations and Data
-
Semantic representation of products, queries, and customers
-
Construction and use of knowledge graphs for eCommerce
-
IR Fundamentals for eCommerce
-
Unified and universal search and recommendations
-
Cross-lingual search and machine translation
-
Indexing and search in rapidly changing environments (e.g., auction
sites)
-
Experimentation techniques including AB testing and multi-armed
bandits
-
Visual Search in ecommerce
-
Large-scale Visual Search Challenges and Solutions
-
Multimodal Search and combining visual and textual information
-
Combining Vision and language models
-
Explainable AI for Visual Search
-
Other challenges
-
Trust, transparency, and fairness in eCommerce
-
UX for eCommerce
-
The role of search in trust and security for marketplaces
-
Question answering and chatbots for eCommerce
Data/Resource Track:
In order to promote academic research in the eCommerce domain, we plan to
accept a small number of high quality dataset contributions. These
submissions should be accompanied by a clear and detailed description of
the dataset, some potential questions and applications that arise from it.
Preliminary empirical investigations conveying any insight about the data
will increase the quality of the submission.
Submission Instructions:
All papers will be peer reviewed (single-blind) by the program committee
and judged by their relevance to the workshop, especially to the main
themes identified above, and their potential to generate discussion.
Submissions must describe work that is not previously published, not
accepted for publication elsewhere, and not currently under review
elsewhere. All submissions must be in English. The workshop follows a
single-blind reviewing process, i.e. author names must be on the papers. We
do not accept anonymized submissions. At least one of the authors of each
accepted paper must register for the workshop and present the paper.
All submissions must be in PDF formatted according to the latest CEUR
single column format; the short (8-page) and long (15-page) limits are
extended to account for this. For instructions and LaTeX/Overleaf/docx
templates, see: https://ceur-ws.org/HOWTOSUBMIT.html#CEURART Read up to and
including the “License footnote in paper PDFs” section. Please Use
Emphasizing Capitalized Style for Paper Titles. Submit your paper PDF
through the SIGIR eCom’24 Easychair:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=sigirecom24
Long paper limit: 15 pages. References are not counted in the page limit.
Short paper limit: 8 pages. References are not counted in the page limit.
The deadline for paper submission is April 25, 2024 (11:59 P.M. AoE)
https://sigir-ecom.github.io/
[Apologies for cross-posting]
EDICIÓN XXIII PREMIO SEPLN A LA MEJOR TESIS DOCTORAL EN PROCESAMIENTO DEL LENGUAJE NATURAL
[Plazo de presentación: 2 de mayo de 2024]
La Sociedad Española para el Procesamiento del Lenguaje Natural convoca la Edición XXIII del Premio SEPLN a la Mejor Tesis Doctoral en Procesamiento del Lenguaje Natural, que se regirá por las siguientes bases:
La finalidad de este premio es la promoción y divulgación de la investigación en el campo del procesamiento del lenguaje natural.
La tesis será premiada con una computadora portátil compacta (tablet) y 300€ para la asistencia al congreso. Se dará entrega del premio en el 40 Congreso Internacional de la Sociedad Española del Procesamiento del Lenguaje Natural (SEPLN 2024), tras una breve presentación del trabajo premiado por parte del autor.
Para poder concursar, el autor de la tesis doctoral debe ser socio de la SEPLN en el momento de presentar el trabajo. Ninguna persona concursante podrá participar como autora en más de un trabajo.
Se podrán presentar a concurso tesis doctorales leídas durante el año 2023, escritas en una lengua del Estado español o en lengua inglesa.
Además de la tesis completa, es imprescindible enviar:
Un breve resumen de 4 páginas donde claramente se indique el tema y la relevancia de la investigación, los objetivos, métodos, resultados alcanzados y contribuciones.
Una breve descripción de la trayectoria científica del autor de la tesis, en la que se describa la participación en actividades científicas como organización de de tareas competitivas, congresos, generación de recursos open access como conjuntos de datos, modelos de lenguaje, etc, y participación en proyectos, contratos, y/o patentes.
La calidad de la presentación, la corrección técnica y metodológica, la relevancia, originalidad, la generación, evaluación y publicación de recursos, así como la trayectoria investigadora durante el periodo predoctoral serán los criterios empleados para la adjudicación del premio por parte del jurado.
Los trabajos se enviarán a través de la web de la revista de la Sociedad (http://journal.sepln.org) en formato PDF antes del 2 de mayo de 2024.
La resolución del premio se comunicará durante el 40 Congreso Internacional de la Sociedad Española del Procesamiento del Lenguaje Natural (SEPLN 2024).
Documento con las instrucciones (aquí)
Para más información dirigirse a aitziber.atucha(a)ehu.eus
23rd EDITION OF THE SEPLN AWARD TO THE BEST DOCTORAL THESIS IN NATURAL LANGUAGE PROCESSING
[Submission deadline: May 2nd, 2024]
The Spanish Society for Natural Language Processing announces the 23rd Edition of the SEPLN Award for the Best Doctoral Thesis in Natural Languag e Processing, which will be governed by the following bases:
The purpose of this award is the promotion and dissemination of research in the field of natural language processing.
The thesis will be awarded with a compact laptop (tablet) and 300€ grant to help cover the cost of attending the conference. The award will be presented at the 40th International Congress of the Spanish Society for Natural Language Processing (SEPLN 2024), after a brief presentation of the award-winning work by the author.
In order to compete, the author of the doctoral thesis must be a member of the SEPLN at the time of submitting the work. No contestant may participate as an author in more than one work.
Doctoral theses read during the year 2023, written in a language of the Spanish State or in English, may be submitted to competition.
In addition to the complete thesis, it is essential to send:
a 4-page summary of the thesis, clearly describing the topic and the relevance of the research, the objectives, methods, results achieved and contributions.
a brief description of the scientific career of the author of the thesis, detailing the participation in scientific activities such as organization of competitive tasks, congresses, generation of open access resources such as sets of data, language models, etc., and participation in projects, contracts, and/or patents.
The quality of the presentation, the technical and methodological correctness, the relevance, originality, the generation, evaluation and publication of resources, as well as the research trajectory during the pre-doctoral period will be the criteria used for the award of the prize by the jury.
The works will be submitted through the website of the Society's magazine (http://journal.sepln.org) in PDF format before May 2nd 2024.
The final decision will be communicated during the 40th International Congress of the Spanish Society for Natural Language Processing (SEPLN 2024).
Submission instructions (here)
For more information aitziber.atucha(a)ehu.eus
The 6th Clinical Natural Language Processing Workshop@ NAACL 2024
<https://2024.naacl.org/>. 20 or 21 June 2024, Mexico City, Mexico.
https://clinical-nlp.github.io/2024
Clinical text is growing rapidly as electronic health records become
pervasive. Much of the information recorded in a clinical encounter is
located exclusively in provider narrative notes, which makes them
indispensable for supplementing structured clinical data in order to better
understand patient state and care provided. The methods and tools developed
for the clinical domain have historically lagged behind the scientific
advances in the general-domain NLP. Despite the substantial recent strides
in clinical NLP, a substantial gap remains. The goal of this workshop is to
address this gap by establishing a regular event in CL conferences that
brings together researchers interested in developing state-of-the-art
methods for the clinical domain. The focus is on improving NLP technology
to enable clinical applications, and specifically, information extraction
and modeling of narrative provider notes from electronic health records,
patient encounter transcripts, and other clinical narratives.
Relevant topics for the workshop include, but are not limited to:
- Modeling clinical text in standard NLP tasks (tagging, chunking,
parsing, entity identification, entity linking/normalization, relation
extraction, coreference, summarization, etc.)
- De-identification and other handling of protected health information
- Disease detection and other coding of clinical documents (e.g., ICD)
- Structure of clinical documents (e.g., section identification)
- Information extraction from clinical text
- Integration of structured and textual data for clinical tasks
- Domain adaptation and transfer learning techniques for clinical data
- Generation of clinical notes: summarization, image-to-text, generation
of notes from clinical conversations, etc.
- Annotation schemes and annotation methodology for clinical data
- Evaluation techniques for the clinical domain
- Bias and fairness in clinical text
In 2024, Clinical NLP will encourage submissions from the following special
tracks:
- Clinical NLP in low-resource settings (e.g., languages other than
English)
- Clinical NLP for clinical conversations (e.g., doctor-patient)
- Risk analysis of large language models for clinical NLP (e.g.,
privacy, bias)
The 6th Clinical NLP Workshop will be co-located with NAACL 2024 in Mexico
City on June 20 or 21.
Shared Tasks
Clinical NLP 2024 is hosting four shared tasks:
- Task 1 - MEDIQA-CORR: Medical Error Detection & Correction
- Task 2 - MEDIQA-M3G: Multilingual & Multimodal Medical Answer
Generation
- Task 3 - EHRSQL: Reliable Text-to-SQL Modeling on Electronic Health
Records
- Task 4 - Chemotherapy Timelines Extraction
Please visit the shared task websites to register to participate and for
additional information about the shared tasks.
- MEDIQA-CORR: https://sites.google.com/view/mediqa2024/mediqa-corr
- MEDIQA-M3G: https://sites.google.com/view/mediqa2024/mediqa-m3g
- EHRSQL: https://github.com/glee4810/ehrsql-2024
- Chemotherapy Timelines Extraction:
http://chemotimelines2024.healthnlp.org
Submissions
The OpenReview submission site is:
- https://openreview.net/group?id=aclweb.org/NAACL/2024
/Workshop/Clinical_NLP
All submissions must follow ACL formatting guidelines
<https://acl-org.github.io/ACLPUB/formatting.html>, including:
- Submissions should be anonymous and must not include any identifying
information about the authors
<https://acl-org.github.io/ACLPUB/review-version.html>
- Long papers may have up to eight (8) pages of content and short papers
may have up to four (4) pages of content.
- You are allowed unlimited pages for references
<https://acl-org.github.io/ACLPUB/formatting.html#paper-length>. Any
“Limitations” section or “Ethics Statement” is similar to references; it
does not count toward the page limit.
Clinical NLP 2024 has no preprint restrictions; you may post to arXiv at
any time. Clinical NLP 2024 workshop proceedings are archival and will be
published on the ACL Anthology
<https://aclanthology.org/venues/clinicalnlp/>.
We encourage submissions of papers submitted to but not accepted by EACL
2024 <https://2024.eacl.org/>, NAACL 2024 <https://2024.naacl.org/>, or ACL
Rolling Review <https://aclrollingreview.org/>, as long as the topics are
relevant to Clinical NLP.
Important Dates
All deadlines are 11:59PM UTC-12:00 (anywhere on Earth
<https://www.timeanddate.com/time/zones/aoe>).
EventDate
Submission deadline *Tuesday, March 19, 2024*
Notification of acceptance Tuesday April 18, 2024
Final versions of papers due Wednesday April 24, 2024
Workshop June 20 or 21, 2024Shared Task Dates
EventDate
Shared task registration opens Monday January 8, 2024
Shared task release of training / validation sets Friday January 26, 2024
Shared task release of the test sets Tuesday March 26, 2024
Shared task run submission deadline Thursday March 28, 2024
Shared task release of official results Monday April 1, 2024
Shared task paper submission deadline Wednesday April 10, 2024Workshop
Organizers
- Asma Ben Abacha (Microsoft)
- Danielle Bitterman (Harvard Medical School)
- Kirk Roberts (UTHealth Houston)
- Steven Bethard (University of Arizona)
- Tristan Naumann (Microsoft Research)
Contact
For inquiries, please contact: clinical-nlp
-workshop-organizers(a)googlegroups.com.
On Fri, Mar 8, 2024 at 12:43 PM Satvik Singh <satvik.singh(a)ahduni.edu.in>
wrote:
> Dear all,
> Greetings!
>
> Apologies for cross-posting.
> *******************************************
>
> I am writing to seek your help in circulating information about our PhD
> programme in Epidemiology
> <https://ahduni.edu.in/admission/doctoral-admission/phd-at-school-of-public-…> Please
> adapt the text below as needed to send to people who can help in
> circulating the information to potential candidates.
>
> There is a growing demand for well-trained Epidemiologists, especially
> those with strong quantitative skills in academic as well as Government,
> nonprofit, and for-profit institutions. As you may be aware, Epidemiology
> and Statistics go hand in hand together. Studying Epidemiology will
> enable people with a statistical background to evaluate and impact the
> habits, risk/preventive factors, and health concerns of people and
> communities. Our PhD programme in Epidemiology
> <https://ahduni.edu.in/admission/doctoral-admission/phd-at-school-of-public-…>
> will not only give students expertise in an important domain, but will
> also enable them to learn data science and advanced biostatistics and apply
> their knowledge to conceive and design, analyse, and interpret research
> studies and address major public health concerns.
>
> Epidemiologists can access complex datasets from hospitals, public health
> agencies, and research institutions to analyse real-world health patterns
> and gain insights into risk, preventive factors, and biological pathways
> using simple and advanced analytical methods. Studying epidemiology would
> also enable them to model the spread of infectious diseases. There is also
> scope to develop innovative study designs, and analytical techniques
> integrating statistics, epidemiological methods and data science.
> Importantly, a combined expertise in statistics and epidemiology will
> enable them to make a positive impact on human and planetary health.
>
> The application portal
> <https://auris.ahduni.edu.in/core-emli-au-develop/online-admission/portal/on…> is
> open for the academic programme starting this August. Ahmedabad
> University awards full tuition fee waiver and financial support to
> full-time doctoral students. The University also encourages Indian and
> foreign students to apply for funding from external sources The financial
> support could be either University Assistantship or University Fellowship,
> or from external sources. We offer University Assistantships at INR 40,000
> per month plus tuition fee waiver, and University Fellowships at INR 50,000
> per month plus tuition fee waiver.
>
> Please circulate this information along with the attached poster to reach
> potential candidates as you think appropriate. If you send us your mailing
> address, we can also mail you a physical poster to put up on your notice
> board.
>
> Regards,
> Satvik
>
> --
>
> Satvik Singh
>
> Research Associate
>
> Centre for Inter-Asian Research
>
> Room B-19, Hub-2, SEAS
>
> Phone: +91.9473394011 | Ext: 1151
>
>
>
--
*Disclaimer:*
*This email (including any attachments) is meant solely
for the addressee(s) and may contain confidential information and/or
content protected by intellectual property laws. If you are not the
intended recipient, please delete this email and all copies from your
system and notify the sender immediately. Any use, disclosure, replication,
copying, distribution, or other kinds of unauthorised dissemination of the
content of the emails is strictly forbidden and will be considered as a
violation of the Ahmedabad University Code of Conduct.*
Processing of figurative language is a rapidly growing area in NLP, including computational modeling of metaphors, idioms, puns, irony, sarcasm, simile, and other figures. Characteristic to all areas of human activity (from poetic, ordinary, scientific, social media) and, thus, to all types of discourse, figurative language becomes an important problem for NLP systems. Its ubiquity in language has been established in a number of corpus studies and the role it plays in human reasoning has been confirmed in psychological experiments. This makes figurative language an important research area for computational and cognitive linguistics, and its automatic identification, interpretation and generation indispensable for any semantics-oriented NLP application.
The proposed workshop will be the fourth edition of the biennial Workshop on Figurative Language Processing, whose first editions were held at NAACL 2018, ACL 2020 and EMNLP 2022, respectively. The workshop builds upon a long series of related workshops that the current organizers have been involved with: “Metaphor in NLP” series (2013-2016) and “Computational Approaches to Linguistic Creativity” series (2009-2010). We expand the scope to incorporate various types of figurative language, with the aim of maintaining and nourishing a community of NLP researchers interested in this topic. The main focus will be on computational modeling of figurative language, however papers on cognitive, linguistic, social, rhetorical, and applied aspects are also of interest, provided that they are presented within a computational, formal, or a quantitative framework. Recent advancement in language models have led to several works on figurative language understanding (Chakrabarty et al 2022a; Chakrabarty et al 2022b; Liu et al 2022; Hu et al 2023) and generation (Stowe et al 2021; Chakrabarty et al 2021; Sun et al 2022; Tian et al 2021) At the same time large language models have opened up opportunities to utilize figurative language in scientific (Kim et al 2023) as well as creative writing (Chakrabarty et al 2022c; Tian et al 2022). Additionally there have also been recent work on multimodal figurative language generation (Chakrabarty et al 2023; Akula et al 2023), understanding (Hessel et al 2023; Yosef et al 2023) and interpretation (Hwang et al 2023; Desai et al 2022; Kumar et al 2022). We encourage submissions along these axes.
Topics of Interest
The workshop will solicit both full papers and short papers for either oral or poster presentation. Topics will include, but will not be limited to, the following:
Identification and interpretation of different types of figurative language: Linguistic, conceptual and extended metaphor; irony, sarcasm, puns, simile, metonymy, personification, synecdoche, hyperbole
Generation of different types of figurative language: sarcasm, simile, metaphors, humor, hyperbole
Multilingual and multimodal figurative language processing
Resources and evaluation
Annotation of figurative language in corpora
Datasets for evaluation of tools
Evaluation methodologies
Figurative use in low-resource languages
Processing of figurative language for NLP applications
Figurative language in sentiment analysis; dialogue systems; computational social science; educational applications
Figurative language and mental health
Figurative language in digital humanities
Figurative language in creative writing
Figurative language and cognition
Cognitive models of processing of figurative language by the human brain
Human-AI collaboration for figurative language
Shared Tasks
Multilingual euphemisms detection: Euphemisms are a linguistic device used to soften or neutralize language that may otherwise be harsh or awkward to state directly (e.g. "between jobs" instead of "unemployed", "late" instead of "dead", "collateral damage" instead of "war-related civilian deaths"). By acting as alternative words or phrases, euphemisms are used in everyday language to maintain politeness, mitigate discomfort, or conceal the truth. While they are culturally-dependent, the need to discuss sensitive topics in a non-offensive way is universal, suggesting similarities in the way euphemisms are used across languages and cultures. We propose a shared task in which participants will need to disambiguate sentences in multiple languages as either euphemistic or not. The dataset will include English, Mandarin, Spanish, Yoruba, and possibly additional languages.
https://www.codabench.org/competitions/1959/
Understanding of Figurative Language through Visual Entailment: One important modality that has gained interest recently is vision, namely the interpretation of figurative language in media such as memes, art, or comics. This task is challenging because it involves reasoning abstractly about images, and also involves understanding social commonsense and cultural context. We will frame this as a visual entailment task where a model not only has to predict if a caption entails the content in the image but also provide free text explanations justifying the label prediction. These tasks have proved difficult for state-of-the-art multimodal models in the past. We will have a paper and a baseline for the same.
https://www.codabench.org/competitions/1970/
Important Dates
Long, Short & Demonstration Paper Submission: March 10th, 2024
Long, Short & Demonstration Paper Notification: April 14th, 2024
Final Paper Submission: April 24th, 2024
Workshop: June 20/21, 2024
For more information, please check https://sites.google.com/view/figlang2024
Dear all,
We're down to our last 7 spots and this could be your last chance to register for our UCREL NLP Summer School 2024, which will be at Lancaster University, UK on 24-26 July 2024.
If you are contemplating registering, please do so as soon as possible. Please note that registrations are processed on a first-come, first-served basis. https://ucrel.lancs.ac.uk/uss2024/
A reminder that the fee includes registration, two nights at Lancaster University's accommodation, breakfast, lunch and dinner, and refreshments.
We're pleased to see that many of our registered attendees have opted to present posters of their work, for which we've allocated a dedicated session.
We highly encourage you to consider doing the same, as it provides an excellent opportunity to receive comments and feedback from NLP experts on your research.
We're also excited to announce our lineup of keynote speakers and NLP expert term who will lead the hands-on tutorials:
- Prof. Udo Kruschwitz, University of Regensburg
- Prof. Eric Atwell, University of Leeds
- Prof. Ruslan Mitkov, Lancaster University
- Dr Marcia Smith, PARIS-DE project, Lancaster University
- Eng. Akraw Dweikat, Deliveroo
- Dr Hansi Hettiarachchi, Birmingham City University
- Dr Tharindu Ranasinghe, Aston University
In addition, the summer school will be run by NLP experts from the UCREL NLP Group covering various core and trending NLP topics:
- Prof. Paul Rayson
- Dr Mo El-Haj
- Dr Saad Ezzini
- Dr Alistair Baron
- Dr Nouran Khallaf
- Dr John Vidler
- Dr Ignatius Ezeani
- Dr Daisy Lal
- Isuri Anuradha
- Damith Dola Mullage
To register and for the full list of speakers and programme details, please visit: https://ucrel.lancs.ac.uk/uss2024/
Best wishes,
Mo
--------------------------------
Dr Mo El-Haj
Senior Lecturer in NLP
Director of Admissions (SCC)
Co-Director of UCREL NLP Group
Natural Language Engineering (NLE) Journal Editorial Board
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/natural-language-engineering
Advisory Board of the Natural Language Processing Book Series
https://benjamins.com/catalog/nlp
School of Computing and Communications, Lancaster University
https://www.lancaster.ac.uk/staff/elhaj
You may receive emails from me outside what are your typical office hours.
I do not expect you to respond to my email outside your working hours.
Apologies for cross-posting!
We'd like to announce that we have extended our submission deadline to *March
22, 2024*. We'll be happy to receive your contributions.
Kind Regards,
Beyza Yaman.
GeoLD2024: 6th International Workshop on Geospatial Linked Data
Hersonissos, Greece, May 26-27, 2024
Conference website https://i3mainz.github.io/GeoLD2024/
Submission link https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=geold2024
Submission deadline March 22, 2024
GeoLD2024
*6th International Workshop on Geospatial Linked Data* at ESWC 2024
<https://2024.eswc-conferences.org/>
Geospatial data is vital for both traditional applications like navigation,
logistics, and tourism and emerging areas like autonomous vehicles, smart
buildings and GIS on demand. Spatial linked data has recently transitioned
from experimental prototypes to national infrastructure. However the next
generation of spatial knowledge graphs will integrate multiple spatial
datasets with the large number of general datasets that contain some
geospatial references (e.g., DBpedia, Wikidata). This integration, either
on the public Web or within organizations has immense socio-economic as
well as academic benefits. The upsurge in Linked data related presentations
in the recent Eurogeographics data quality workshop shows the deep interest
in Geospatial Linked Data (GLD) in national mapping agencies. GLD enables a
web-based, interoperable geospatial infrastructure. This is especially
relevant for delivering the INSPIRE directive in Europe. Moreover,
geospatial information systems benefit from Linked Data principles in
building the next generation of spatial data applications e.g., federated
smart buildings, self-piloted vehicles, delivery drones or automated local
authority services.
This workshop invites papers covering the challenges and solutions for
handling with GLD, especially for building high quality, adaptable,
geospatial infrastructures and next-generation spatial applications. We aim
to demonstrate the latest approaches and implementations and to discuss the
solutions to challenges and issues arising from research and industrial
organizations.
The following topics of interest are covered by GeoLD2024.
*Interoperability and Integration*
- Geospatial Linked Data vocabularies and standards (GeoSPARQL, INSPIRE,
W3C, OGC)
- Extraction/transformation of Geospatial Linked Data from native
geospatial data sources
- Integration (schema mapping, interlinking, fusion) techniques for
Geospatial RDF Data
- Enrichment, quality and evolution of Linked Data with Geospatial
information
- Machine Learning improving Geospatial Linked Data processing
- Natural Language Processing, especially Large Language Models for
improving GLD processing
*Big Geospatial Data Management*
- Distributed solutions for Geospatial Linked Data management (storing,
querying, mapping)
- Algorithms and tools for large scale, scalable Geospatial Linked Data
management
- Efficient Indexing and Querying of Geospatial Linked Data
- Geospatial-specific Reasoning on RDF Data
- Ranking techniques on querying Geospatial RDF Data
- Advanced querying capabilities on Geospatial RDF Data
*Utilization of Geospatial Linked Data*
- Benchmarking of Geospatial Linked Data applications
- Geospatial Linked Data in social web platforms and applications
- Geospatial linked data applications for indoor navigation
- Visualization models/interfaces for browsing/authoring/querying
Geospatial Linked Data
- Real-world applications/use cases/paradigms using Geospatial Linked
Data
- Evaluation/comparison of tools/libraries/frameworks for Geospatial
Linked Data
- Data governance models for Geospatial Linked Data
Submission Guidelines
All papers must be original and not simultaneously submitted to another
journal or conference. The following paper categories are welcome:
- *Long papers (up to 12 pages)*: Presenting novel scientific research
pertaining to geospatial Linked Data.
- *Short papers (up to 6 pages)*: Position papers, System, Library, API
and Dataset descriptions, relevant to the topics of interest.
- *Demo/Tutorial papers (up to 4 pages)*: Describe a demo or hands-on
tutorial of a tool on the workshop topics
CommitteesProgram Committee
- Dr. Manolis Koubarakis, National and Kapodistrian University of
Athens, Greece
- Dr. Sergio José Rodríguez Méndez, Australian National University,
Australia
- Dr. Milos Jovanovik, Ss. Cyril and Methodius University in Skopje, N.
Macedonia
- Dr. Mirko Spasić, OpenLink Software, UKNikolaos Karalis, DICE research
group, University of Paderborn, Germany
- Dr. Nicholas Car, Kurrawong AI, AustraliaDr. Erwin Folmer Kadaster,
University of Twente, The Netherlands
- Dr. Pasquale Di Donato, swisstopo/COGIS, Switzerland
- Abdullah Fathi Ahmed, ETAS / Robert Bosch Group, Germany
- Dr. Hamada Zahera, DICE research group, University of Paderborn,
Germany
- Johannes Lipp, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
- Dr. Michael Röder, DICE research group, University of Paderborn,
Germany
- Daniel Vollmers, DICE research group, University of Paderborn, Germany
Organizing committee
- Timo Homburg (i3mainz -- Institute for Spatial Information Surveying
Technology, Mainz University Of Applied Sciences, Germany)
- Dr. Beyza Yaman (ADAPT Centre, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland)
- Dr. Mohamed Ahmed Sherif (University of Paderborn, Germany)
- Prof. Dr. Axel-Cyrille Ngonga Ngomo (University Of Paderborn, Germany)
Contact
All questions about submissions should be emailed to
Timo.Homburg(a)hs-mainz.de
9th Symposium on Corpus Approaches to Lexicogrammar (LxGr2024)
CALL FOR PAPERS
Extended deadline for abstract submission: 7 April 2024
The symposium will take place online on Friday 5 and Saturday 6 July 2024.
Invited Speakers
Lise Fontaine<http://www.uqtr.ca/PagePerso/Lise.Fontaine> (Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières): Reconciling (or not) lexis and grammar
Ute Römer-Barron<http://alsl.gsu.edu/profile/ute-romer> (Georgia State University): Phraseology research in second language acquisition
LxGr primarily welcomes papers reporting on corpus-based research on any aspect of the interaction of lexis and grammar - particularly studies that interrogate the system lexicogrammatically to get lexicogrammatical answers. However, position papers discussing theoretical or methodological issues are also welcome, as long as they are relevant to both lexicogrammar and corpus linguistics.
If you would like to present, send an abstract of 500 words (excluding references) to lxgr(a)edgehill.ac.uk<mailto:lxgr@edgehill.ac.uk>.
Abstracts for research papers should specify the research focus (research questions or hypotheses), the corpus, the methodology (techniques, metrics), the theoretical orientation, and the main findings. Abstracts for position papers should specify the theoretical orientation and the potential contribution to both lexicogrammar and corpus linguistics.
Abstracts will be double-blind reviewed by members of the Programme Committee<https://sites.edgehill.ac.uk/lxgr/committee>.
Full papers will be allocated 35 minutes (including 10 minutes for discussion).
Work-in-progress reports will be allocated 20 minutes (including 5 minutes for discussion).
There will be no parallel sessions.
Participation is free.
For details, visit the LxGr website: https://sites.edgehill.ac.uk/lxgr/lxgr2024
If you have any questions, contact lxgr(a)edgehill.ac.uk<mailto:lxgr@edgehill.ac.uk>.
________________________________
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Dear colleagues,
The Fifth Workshop on Insights from Negative Results in NLP Co-located with
NAACL, June 16-21 2024
First Call for Participation
Insights Website: <https://insights-workshop.github.io/
<https://insights-workshop.github.io/index>>
Contact email: insights-workshop-organizers(a)googlegroups.com
*Overview
Publication of negative results is difficult in most fields, but in NLP the
problem is exacerbated by the near-universal focus on improvements in
benchmarks. This situation implicitly discourages hypothesis-driven
research, and it turns the creation and fine-tuning of NLP models into art
rather than science. Furthermore, it increases the time, effort, and carbon
emissions spent on developing and tuning models, as the researchers have no
opportunity to learn what has already been tried and failed.
This workshop invites both practical and theoretical unexpected or negative
results that have important implications for future research, highlight
methodological issues with existing approaches, and/or point out pervasive
misunderstandings or bad practices. In particular, the most successful NLP
models currently rely on Transformer-based large language models (LLMs). To
complement all the success stories, it would be insightful to see where and
possibly why they fail. Any NLP tasks are welcome: sequence labeling,
question answering, inference, dialogue, machine translation - you name it.
A successful negative results paper would contribute one of the following:
** broadly applicable recommendations for training/fine-tuning/prompting,
especially if X that didn’t work is something that many practitioners would
think reasonable to try, and if the demonstration of X’s failure is
accompanied by some explanation/hypothesis;
** ablation studies of components in previously proposed models, showing
that their contributions are different from what was initially reported;
** datasets or probing tasks showing that previous approaches do not
generalize to other domains or language phenomena;
** trivial baselines that work suspiciously well for a given task/dataset;
** Cross-lingual studies showing that technique X is only successful for a
certain language or language family;
** experiments on (in)stability of the previously published results due to
hardware, random initializations, preprocessing pipeline components, etc;
** theoretical arguments and/or proofs for why X should not be expected to
work;
** demonstration of issues with data processing/collection/annotation
pipelines, especially if they are widely used;
** demonstration of issues with evaluation metrics (e.g. accuracy, F1, or
BLEU), which prevent their usage for fair comparison of methods;
** Demonstration of issues with under-reporting of training details of
pre-trained models, including test data contamination and invalid
comparisons
In 2024, we will invite the authors of accepted negative results papers to
nominate the specific work reporting the original positive results. The
goal is to organize joint discussion sessions so that the community can
learn the most from the specific insightful failure.
* Important Dates
** Submission due March 17, 2024
** Submission due for papers reviewed through ACL Rolling Review: April 7,
2024
** Notification of acceptance: April 20, 2024
** Camera-ready papers due: April 30, 2024
** Workshop: TBA, between June 21-22, 2024
* Submission
Submission is electronic, using the Softconf START conference management
system.
Submission link: <https://softconf.com/naacl2024/insights2024/>
The workshop will accept short papers (up to 4 pages, excluding
references), as well as 1-2 page non-archival abstract submissions for
papers published elsewhere (e.g. in one of the main conferences or in
non-NLP venues). The goal of this event is to stimulate a meaningful
community-wide discussion of the deep issues in NLP methodology, and the
authors of both types of submissions will be welcome to take part in our
get-togethers.
The workshop will run its review process, and papers can be submitted
directly to the workshop by March 17, 2024. It is also possible to submit a
paper accompanied with reviews from the ACL Rolling Review system by April
7, 2024. The submission deadline for ARR papers follows the ACL RR
calendar. Both research papers and abstracts must follow the ACL two-column
format. Official style sheets:
https://github.com/acl-org/acl-style-files
Please do not modify these style files, nor should you use templates
designed for other conferences. Submissions that do not conform to the
required styles, including paper size, margin width, and font size
restrictions, will be rejected without review. Please follow the formatting
guidelines outlined here: https://acl-org.github.io/ACLPUB/formatting.html
* Multiple Submission Policy
The workshop cannot accept work for publication or presentation that will
be (or has been) published elsewhere and that have been or will be
submitted to other meetings or publications whose review periods overlap
with that of Insights. Any questions regarding submissions can be sent to
insights-workshop-organizers(a)googlegroups.com.
If the paper has been rejected from another venue, the authors will have
the option to provide the original reviews and the author's response. The
new reviewers will not have access to this information, but the organizers
will be able to take into account the fact that the paper has already been
revised and improved.
* Anonymity Period
The workshop will follow the new ACL policy:
https://www.aclweb.org/adminwiki/index.php/ACL_Anonymity_Policy
* Presentation
All accepted papers must be presented at the workshop to appear in the
proceedings. Authors of accepted papers must notify the program chairs by
the camera-ready deadline if they wish to withdraw the paper. At least one
author of each accepted paper must register for the workshop.
Previous presentations of the work (e.g. preprints on arXiv.org) should be
noted in a footnote in the camera-ready version (but not in the anonymized
version of the paper).
The workshop will take place during NAACL 2024 (June 16-21 2024). It will
be hybrid, allowing for both in-person and virtual presentations.
* Organization Committee
** Shabnam Tafreshi, inQbator AI at eviCore Healthcare
** Arjun Reddy Akula, Google Research
** João Sedoc, New York University
** Anna Rogers, IT University of Copenhagen
** Aleksandr Drozd, RIKEN
** Anna Rumshisky, University of Massachusetts Lowell / Amazon Alexa
* Contact info
Any questions regarding the workshop can be sent to
insights-workshop-organizers(a)googlegroups.com.
Please continue reading about: Authorship, Citation and Comparison, Ethics
Policy, Reproducibility, and Presentation in the call for paper page on our
website: https://insights-workshop.github.io/2024/cfp/
Regards,
Insights 2024 Organizers
--
*Shabnam Tafreshi, PhD*
*Machine Learning Senior Advisor - NLP Researcher*
*Computational Linguistics, NLP*
*inQbator AI at eviCore Healthcare*
*"All the problems of the world could be settled easily, if people only
willing to think."*
*-Thomas J. Watson*
Please consider contributing and/or forwarding to appropriate colleagues and groups.
****We apologize for the multiple copies of this e-mail****
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Call for Participation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
First Call for Participation:
EXIST 2024 at CLEF 2024:
Task: EXIST 2024: sEXism Identification in Social neTworks
Website: http://nlp.uned.es/exist2024/
EXIST is a series of scientific events and shared tasks on sEXism Identification in Social neTworks (EXIST 2021, EXIST 2022, EXIST 2023). EXIST aims to capture sexism in a broad sense, from explicit misogyny to other subtle expressions that involve implicit sexist behaviors. The fourth edition of the EXIST shared task will be held as a Lab in CLEF 2024, on September 9-12, 2024, at the University of Grenoble Alpes, France.
Since 2021, the primary objective of EXIST campaigns has been the identification of sexism in tweets. Three corpora of annotated tweets have been collected for different EXIST tasks. Likewise, the focus of EXIST 2024 is to detect sexism in text, using the EXIST 2023 dataset, but we also extend the focus to memes. Memes are images, usually with text captions, that typically carry humor and spread through social media, forums, or other digital platforms. They can be used to spread false information, perpetuate stereotypes or humiliate people.
As in the 2023 edition, this edition will also embrace the Learning With Disagreement (LeWiDi) paradigm for both the development of the dataset and the evaluation of the systems. The LeWiDi paradigm does not rely on a single “correct” label for each example. Instead, the model is trained to handle and learn from conflicting or diverse annotations. This enables the system to consider various annotators’ perspectives, biases, or interpretations, resulting in a fairer learning process.
Participants will be asked to classify tweets and memes (in English and Spanish) according to the following six tasks:
TASK 1 - Sexism Identification in Tweets: The first subtask is a binary classification. The systems have to decide whether or not a given text (tweet) contains sexist expressions or behaviors (i.e., it is sexist itself, describes a sexist situation or criticizes a sexist behavior).
TASK 2 - Source Intention in Tweets: For the tweets that have been classified as sexist, the second task aims to classify each tweet according to the intention of the person who wrote it. We propose a ternary classification task: (i) DIRECT sexist message, (ii) REPORTED sexist message and (iii) JUDGEMENTAL message.
TASK 3 - Sexism Categorization in Tweets: Once a message has been classified as sexist, the third task aims to categorize the message in different types of sexism (according to a categorization proposed by experts and that takes into account the different facets of women that are undermined). In particular, each sexist tweet must be categorized in one or more of the following categories: (i) IDEOLOGICAL AND INEQUALITY, (ii) STEREOTYPING AND DOMINANCE, (iii) OBJECTIFICATION, (iv) SEXUAL VIOLENCE and (v) MISOGYNY AND NON-SEXUAL VIOLENCE.
TASK 4 - Sexism Identification in Memes: This is a binary classification task consisting of deciding whether or not a given meme is sexist.
Task 5: Source Intention in Memes: As in Task 2, this task aims to categorize the sexists memes according to the intention of the author. Due to the characteristics of the memes, the REPORTED label is virtually null, so in this task systems should only classify sexist memes in DIRECT or JUDGEMENTAL.
Task 6: Sexism Categorization in Memes: This task aims to classify sexist memes according to the categorization provided for Task 3: (i) IDEOLOGICAL AND INEQUALITY, (ii) STEREOTYPING AND DOMINANCE, (iii) OBJECTIFICATION, (iv) SEXUAL VIOLENCE and (v) MISOGYNY AND NON-SEXUAL VIOLENCE.
Although we recommend to participate in all subtasks, participants are allowed to participate just in one of them (e.g., subtask 1).
During the training phase, the task organizers will provide to the participants the manually-annotated EXIST 2024 dataset. For the evaluation of the teams, the unlabelled test data will be released.
We encourage participation from both academic institutions and industrial organizations. We invite the participants to register for the lab at CLEF 2024 Labs Registration site (https://clef2024-labs-registration.dei.unipd.it/). You will receive information about how to join the Google Group for the EXIST 2024 shared task.
Important Dates:
* 13 November 2023 - Registration open.
* 4 March 2024 - Training and development sets available.
* 15 April 2024 - Test set available.
* 22 April 2024 - Registration closes.
* 6 May 2024 - Runs submission due to organizers.
* 20 May 2024 - Results notification to participants.
* 3 June 2024 - Submission of Working Notes by participants.
* 19 June 2024 - Notification of acceptance (peer-reviews).
* 3 July 2024 - Camera-ready participant papers due to organizers.
* 9-12 September 2024 - EXIST 2024 at CLEF Conference.
** Note: All deadlines are 11:59PM UTC-12:00 ("anywhere on Earth") **
Organizers:
Laura Plaza, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia (UNED)
Jorge Carrillo-de-Albornoz, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia (UNED)
Enrique Amigó, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia (UNED)
Julio Gonzalo, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia (UNED)
Roser Morante, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia (UNED)
Víctor Ruiz García, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia (UNED)
Damiano Spina, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT)
Paolo Rosso, Universitat Politècnica de València (UPV)
Berta Chulvi, Universitat Politècnica de València (UPV)
Alba Maeso Olmos, Universitat Politècnica de València (UPV)
Contact:
Contact the organizers by writing to: jcalbornoz(a)lsi.uned.es
Website: http://nlp.uned.es/exist2024/
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