This event has been canceled.
[Corpora-List] Monthly online ILFC Seminar: interactions between formal and
computational linguistics
Wednesday 2024-09-11 ⋅ 17:00 – 18:00
Central European Time - Berlin
Join with Google Meet
https://meet.google.com/dyw-vtfm-prq?hs=224
Monthly online ILFC Seminar: interactions between formal and computational
linguistics
https://gdr-lift.loria.fr/monthy-online-ilfc-seminar/
The LIFT 2 research group is happy to announce the three forthcoming
sessions of the ILFC seminar on the interactions between formal and
computational linguistics:
2024/09/11 17:00-18:00 UTC+2: Meaghan Fowlie (Utrecht University)
Title: Trees as building instructions
Abstract: Trees are very common linguistic representations, used for
instance in rewrite grammars, X-Bar grammars, and lambda expressions. Trees
can also be records of the steps by which a structure was built, for
instance a derivation tree or a term over an algebra. These building
instructions don’t have to build trees, but can build anything you like.
This opens the possibility of using well-established and interpretable
tree-prediction methods, such as dependency parsing, to predict...
Organizer
Kilian Evang
kilian.evang(a)gmail.com
~~//~~
Invitation from Google Calendar: https://calendar.google.com/calendar/
You are receiving this email because you are an attendee on the event. To
stop receiving future updates for this event, decline this event.
Forwarding this invitation could allow any recipient to send a response to
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Learn more https://support.google.com/calendar/answer/37135#forwarding
[Corpora-List] Monthly online ILFC Seminar: interactions between formal and
computational linguistics
Wednesday 2024-09-11 ⋅ 17:00 – 18:00
Central European Time - Berlin
Join with Google Meet
https://meet.google.com/dyw-vtfm-prq?hs=224
Monthly online ILFC Seminar: interactions between formal and computational
linguistics
https://gdr-lift.loria.fr/monthy-online-ilfc-seminar/
The LIFT 2 research group is happy to announce the three forthcoming
sessions of the ILFC seminar on the interactions between formal and
computational linguistics:
2024/09/11 17:00-18:00 UTC+2: Meaghan Fowlie (Utrecht University)
Title: Trees as building instructions
Abstract: Trees are very common linguistic representations, used for
instance in rewrite grammars, X-Bar grammars, and lambda expressions. Trees
can also be records of the steps by which a structure was built, for
instance a derivation tree or a term over an algebra. These building
instructions don’t have to build trees, but can build anything you like.
This opens the possibility of using well-established and interpretable
tree-prediction methods, such as dependency parsing, to predict...
Organizer
Kilian Evang
kilian.evang(a)gmail.com
Guests
Kilian Evang - organizer
corpora(a)list.elra.info
View all guest info
https://calendar.google.com/calendar/event?action=VIEW&eid=NHJqbzJqNzFhc3Vl…
Reply for corpora(a)list.elra.info and view more details
https://calendar.google.com/calendar/event?action=VIEW&eid=NHJqbzJqNzFhc3Vl…
Your attendance is optional.
~~//~~
Invitation from Google Calendar: https://calendar.google.com/calendar/
You are receiving this email because you are an attendee on the event. To
stop receiving future updates for this event, decline this event.
Forwarding this invitation could allow any recipient to send a response to
the organizer, be added to the guest list, invite others regardless of
their own invitation status, or modify your RSVP.
Learn more https://support.google.com/calendar/answer/37135#forwarding
Monthly online ILFC Seminar: interactions between formal and computational
linguistics
https://gdr-lift.loria.fr/monthy-online-ilfc-seminar/
The LIFT 2 research group is happy to announce the three forthcoming
sessions of the ILFC seminar on the interactions between formal and
computational linguistics:
- 2024/09/11 17:00-18:00 UTC+2: *Meaghan Fowlie* (Utrecht University)
Title:
*Trees as building instructions *Abstract: *Trees are very common
linguistic representations, used for instance in rewrite grammars, X-Bar
grammars, and lambda expressions. Trees can also be records of the steps by
which a structure was built, for instance a derivation tree or a term over
an algebra. These building instructions don’t have to build trees, but can
build anything you like. This opens the possibility of using
well-established and interpretable tree-prediction methods, such as
dependency parsing, to predict a wide variety of structures. This talk will
cover some subset of the following ways of using trees as building
instructions: IRTGs, Minimalist Grammars, algebra terms, and rewrite
grammars. It will also cover some subset of the following computational
methods for predicting trees qua building instructions: the Apply-Modify
Algebra and Minimalist parsing.*
- 2024/10/16 *15:00-16:00* UTC+2: *Isabelle Dautriche* (CNRS)
Title: [TBA]
Abstract: [TBA]
- 2024/11/13 17:00-18:00 UTC+1: *Denis Paperno* (Utrecht University)
Title: [TBA]
Abstract: [TBA]
The seminar is held on Zoom. To attend the seminar and get updates, please
subscribe to our mailing list (we now only rarely communicate through other
mailing lists): https://sympa.inria.fr/sympa/subscribe/seminaire_ilfc
[Apologies for cross-postings]
***Call for Papers: Knowledge and Natural Language Processing track***
We are pleased to invite you to submit your contribution to SAC 2025!
The 40th ACM/SIGAPP Symposium on Applied Computing ACM SAC 2025
March 31 - April 4, 2025 - Catania, Italy
Knowledge and Natural Language Processing Track
Aim & Scope
Aim of the Knowledge and Natural Language Processing (KNLP) track at ACM SAC
is to investigate techniques and application of knowledge engineering and
natural language processing, two extremely interdisciplinary and lively
research areas at the core of Artificial Intelligence. In particular, the
track welcomes contributions combining and complementing methods and
approaches from both areas.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
* Natural Language Processing
* NLP tasks for Knowledge Extraction
* NLP for Ontology Population and Learning
* Sentiment Analysis and Opinion Mining for Knowledge Applications
* Interplay between Language and Ontologies
* NLP for Explainable Knowledge
* Machine Translation techniques for Multi-lingual Knowledge
* NLP for the Web
* (Large) Language Models and Knowledge
* Knowledge
* Knowledge to improve NLP tasks
* Knowledge for Information Retrieval
* Knowledge-based Sentiment Analysis and Opinion Mining
* Combining Knowledge and Deep Learning for NLP
* Knowledge for Text Summarization and Generation
* Knowledge for Persuasion
* Knowledge-based Machine Translation
* Knowledge for the Web
* Linked Data for NLP
* Knowledge-based NL Explainability
* RAG and Knowledge injection for Language Models
* Applications
* Real-world applications that exploit Knowledge and NLP
* Knowledge and NLP Systems for Big Data scenarios
* Knowledge and NLP technology for diverse, equitable, and inclusive
society
* Deployment of Knowledge and NLP Systems in specific domains, such
as:
* Digital Humanities and Social Sciences
* eGovernment and public administration
* Life sciences, health and medicine
* News and Data Streaming
Paper Submission
Research papers and experience reports related to the above topics are
solicited. Submissions must not have been published or be concurrently
considered for publication elsewhere. Papers should be submitted in PDF
using the ACM-SAC proceedings format using the submission link on the SAC
2025 website ( <https://www.sigapp.org/sac/sac2025/>
https://www.sigapp.org/sac/sac2025/). Authors' names and affiliations should
be entered separately at the submission site and not appear in the submitted
papers. Each submission will be reviewed in a DOUBLE-BLIND process according
to the ACM-SAC Regulations. Student Research Competition (SRC) submissions
are welcome (see SAC 2025 website for details).
Full papers are limited to 8 pages, in camera-ready format, included in the
registration fee. Authors have the option to include up to two (2) extra
pages (paying an extra charge).
Posters are limited to 2 pages, in camera-ready format, included in the
registration fee. Authors have the option to include only one (1) extra page
(paying an extra charge).
SRC Abstracts are limited to 3 pages, in camera-ready format, included in
the registration fee. No extra pages are allowed.
Paper selection is based on originality, technical contribution,
presentation quality, and relevance to the Knowledge and Natural Language
Processing Track. Some papers may be accepted as posters.
Paper registration is required, allowing the inclusion of the paper/poster
in the conference proceedings. An author or a proxy attending SAC MUST
present the paper. This is a requirement for the paper/poster to be included
in the ACM digital library. No-show of registered papers and posters will
result in excluding them from the ACM digital library.
Important Dates
* Author deadline for submissions: September 20, 2024
* Author notification of acceptance: October 30, 2024
* Author camera ready and registration due: November 29, 2024
Track Co-Chairs
Patrizio Bellan, Fondazione Bruno Kessler (FBK)
Marco Bombieri, Università degli Studi di Verona
Mauro Dragoni, Fondazione Bruno Kessler (FBK)
Marco Rospocher, Università degli Studi di Verona
Programme Committee
TBA
General Inquiries
For further information, please visit SAC Knowledge and Natural Language
Processing Track ( <https://knlp-sac.github.io/2025/>
https://knlp-sac.github.io/2025/) and SAC 2024 conference websites (
<https://www.sigapp.org/sac/sac2025/> https://www.sigapp.org/sac/sac2025/)
or feel free to contact the Track Co-Chairs at <mailto:knlp@fbk.eu>
knlp(a)fbk.eu .
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AIAI 32nd Irish Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive
Science (AICS 2024)
December 09-10th 2024
University College Dublin (UCD)
https://aics2024.ucd.ie
The 32nd Irish Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive
Science (AICS2024) will be hosted by the School of Computer Science at
University College Dublin (UCD) and will take place from 9th to 10th
December 2024.
With regular conferences dating back to 1988, the AICS Conference is
Ireland's primary forum for researchers with interests in the fields
of Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive Science.
Submissions
-------------------
The Program Committee of AICS2024 invites submissions in the broad
areas of Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive Science. Areas of
interest include, but are not restricted to:
*Machine Learning (supervised/semi-supervised/unsupervised learning,
meta-learning, ensemble learning etc.)
*Cognitive Science (Decision making, perception, concept combination,
creative cognition etc.)
*Applications (Computer Vision, speech/audio processing, natural
language processing, ML for medicine, recommender systems etc. )
*Deep Learning (Network architectures, deep generative models, graph
neural networks, foundation models etc.)
*AI Ethics (Fairness, interpretability, transparency, explainability,
environmental impact of AI etc.)
*Datasets (Novel datasets, benchmarks, dataset audits, dataset design etc. )
*Machine Learning Testing (Safety, evaluation metrics, robustness etc. )
*Learning Theory (Optimisation, Bayesian Methods, Game Theory,
Complexity Analysis etc. )
*Semantic Web (Knowledge Graphs, Social Network Analysis etc.)
We invite three types of submissions:
--------------------------------------
*Full Paper Track: Full paper submissions should consist of original
contributions (describing either fundamental research, interesting
applications, in-use experiences, or reviews of the field) not
published in other forums. Papers should be 6 to 12 pages in length in
the Springer LNCS style. Accepted submissions will appear in online
proceedings and authors will be invited for oral or poster
presentations.
*Student Track: This track is designed to facilitate students who have
recently completed a Bachelor’s or Master’s program. Student track
submissions should consist of original contributions (describing
either basic research or interesting applications) and the first
author must be a student. Papers should be 6 to 12 pages in length in
the Springer LNCS style. Accepted submissions will appear in the
online proceedings and authors will be invited for a poster
presentation.
*NECTAR Track: NECTAR track submissions should describe significant
results previously published or disseminated no earlier than 2022 at a
prestigious international conference or journal. Accepted submissions
will be included in online proceedings as a single-page abstract, and
authors will be invited to present their work orally at AICS.
All accepted submissions in Full Paper Track and Student Paper Track
will appear in online proceedings (TBA).
Publication and Instructions for Authors
-----------------------------------------
All accepted submissions will be presented at the conference, either
orally or as posters, and included in the online conference
proceedings. At least one author of each submission will be required
to register for, and attend, the conference. All submissions must be
made via the EasyChair system online at
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=aics20240
Full papers and student papers must be submitted in Springer LNCS
format (single column proceedings), which is also the format required
for the final camera-ready copy. A sample LaTeX document in this
format is available here.
NECTAR track submissions should consist of a single page with an
abstract and reference to the original publication. A sample NECTAR
track submission is available here.
Important Dates
-------------------
Paper Submission Deadline for all Tracks - 1st October 2024, 23:59 Irish time
Acceptance Notification for all Papers - 29th October 2024
Camera Ready Submissions (all tracks) - 12th November 2024
Organisation
-------------------
Arjun Pakrashi (University College Dublin) arjun.pakrashi(a)ucd.ie
Ellen Rushe (Dublin City University) ellen.rushe(a)dcu.ie
Brian Mac Namee (University College Dublin) brian.macnamee(a)ucd.ie
Rob Brennan (University College Dublin) rob.brennan(a)ucd.ie
Contacts
-------------------
Website: https://aics2024.ucd.ie
Twitter: @AICSconference
ReplyForward
Third Call for Main Conference Papers (COLING 2025)
Important Dates
All deadlines are 11:59 PM 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
Website: https://coling2025.org/calls/main_conference_papers/
---------- 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
<https://sites.google.com/view/crac2024/> CRAC 2024, the Seventh Workshop
on Computational Models of Reference, Anaphora and Coreference, will be held
at EMNLP 2024 <https://2024.emnlp.org/> in Miami on November 15, 2024.
Important dates
- Workshop papers due: September 1, 2024 (extended)
- ARR commitment date: September 22, 2024
- Notification of acceptance: September 24, 2024
- Camera-ready papers due: October 4, 2024
- Workshop date: November 15, 2024
About the workshop
The CRAC workshop is a forum for presenting work on all aspects of
computational work on anaphora resolution and annotation, including both
coreference and types of anaphora such as bridging reference resolution and
discourse deixis.
Since 2016, the annual CRAC <https://aclanthology.org/venues/crac/> (and
its predecessor, CORBON <https://aclanthology.org/venues/corbon/> ) workshop
has become the main forum for researchers interested in computational
modelling of reference, anaphora and coreference to discuss and publish
their results. Over the years, this workshop series has been held at major
NLP conferences and has successfully organised 7 shared tasks, which
stimulating interest in new problems in this research area, facilitating
discussion and dissemination of results on new problems/directions (e.g.
multimodal reference resolution).
Topics of interest
We are interested in your work on any aspect of theoretical or applied
computational work on anaphora/coreference resolution. Some suggested topics
include:
- Coreference resolution for less-researched languages
- Annotation and interpretation of anaphoric relations, including relations
other than identity coreference (e.g., bridging references)
- Investigation of difficult cases of anaphora and their resolution
- Coreference resolution in noisy data (e.g. in social media)
- New applications of coreference resolution
- <https://universalanaphora.github.io/UniversalAnaphora/> Universal
Anaphora
- CorefUD <https://ufal.mff.cuni.cz/corefud>
CRAC 2024 Shared Task on Multilingual Coreference Resolution
The workshop will also present the results of our Shared Task on
Multilingual Coreference Resolution
<https://ufal.mff.cuni.cz/corefud/crac24> , based on 17 coreference datasets
for 12 languages harmonized under a common CoNLL-U scheme.
Paper categories
- Research papers (theoretical computational linguistics,
empirical/data-driven approaches, paradigms/techniques/strategies, analysis
papers, resources and evaluation, negative result)
- Survey papers (surveys a popular or emerging area of anaphora/coreference
resolution)
- Position papers (presents one side of an arguable opinion about an issue)
- Challenge papers (a challenge to the field in terms of setting out a goal
for the next 5/10/20 years)
- Demo papers (systems, tools, visualizations)
- Extended abstracts (describe work in progress)
Double submission
We allow for double submissions. Please indicate at the time of submission
which other conference or workshop your work has been submitted to.
We also invite authors of papers accepted for the Findings of major
conferences (e.g. ACL, NAACL, EMNLP) to present their work at the workshop.
If these papers have been removed from the Findings, they may be included in
the workshop proceedings without further review.
Submission link
You can either submit your paper to SoftConf
<https://softconf.com/emnlp2024/CRAC2024/> (by the August 22 submission
deadline) or commit your ARR-reviewed paper to CRAC 2024 (by the September
22 commitment deadline). If you choose to commit your ARR-reviewed paper to
CRAC, the latest ARR cycle to which you need to submit your paper for review
is the June 2024 cycle.
All submissions must follow the *ACL formatting instructions
<https://acl-org.github.io/ACLPUB/formatting.html> . An Overleaf template
<https://www.overleaf.com/latex/templates/association-for-computational-ling
uistics-acl-conference/jvxskxpnznfj> is also available.
All other information
All other information can be found on the CRAC 2024 website
<https://sites.google.com/view/crac2024/> or by e-mailing the organizers
<mailto:maciej.ogrodniczuk@gmail.com> .
See you at CRAC 2024!
Maciej Ogrodniczuk
(on behalf of all the organizers: Vincent Ng, Sameer Pradhan, Anna
Nedoluzhko and Massimo Poesio)
I’m hope that Jakob is enjoying some vacation-time, however, my mailbox is quickly filling up.
Is there anything we can do to pause this spam?
All the best,
Daniel Varab
CALL FOR ONE DAY EVENT PROPOSALS
The Information Retrieval Specialist Group (IRSG) of the BCS invites proposals for the organisation of one day events supported by BCS. Proposals will be evaluated based on the organisational and financial plans and benefits to the Information Retrieval community.
IMPORTANT DATES
* Submission deadline for this round: 02-Aug-2024
* Notification: 16-Aug-2024
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
Proposals should be in PDF and include the following:
* Title of the event
* Chairs and organisers
* Contact information
* A description of the event topic and its goals
* A statement on how the event complements or relates to other IR events
* Proposed venue
* Desired format, including preferred dates and duration, onsite or hybrid
* Outline of the program (including talks, breaks, and any social events)
* Potential (or accepted) speakers
* Publicity plans
* Funding plans and preliminary budget
Organisers of accepted events are expected to announce the event and call for speakers, solicit speakers, compose the program, and organise the event. Evaluation criteria include topic significance and timeliness, scientific quality, proposed organisation, level of interest, and synergy with other events.
Accepted events will be supported up to £1,000 and are expected to have a credible financial plan and budget. We anticipate holding further funding rounds in due course. Topics should be related to the theory and practice of information retrieval and interaction, such as:
* Topical issues in IR practice, e.g. trust, bias, and fairness
* Interdisciplinary topics, e.g IR and information science, data science, or user experience
* The use (and abuse) of large language models and other AI techniques
* Domain-specific or professional issues, e.g. in eCommerce, media, recruitment, library and information science, healthcare information, etc.
* Innovative approaches used in operational IR systems and products
Proposals and enquiries should be submitted via email to the IRSG Events Organiser and Chair (tgr2uk(a)gmail.com and Udo.Kruschwitz(a)ur.de) with "BCS One Day Event Proposal" in the email subject.
ABOUT THE IRSG
The IRSG is a Specialist Group of BCS. Its mission is to provide a focus for the European IR community, facilitate communication between researchers and practitioners and promote the adoption of IR research within industry. We host a major European conference (ECIR) and provide an associated programme of workshops, seminars and events. The IRSG provides access to further IR articles, events and resources. For how to join the IRSG please see http://irsg.bcs.org, or contact the membership secretary at h.liu(a)soton.ac.uk.
BCS is the industry body for IT professionals. With members in over 100 countries around the world, BCS is the leading professional and learned society in the field of computers and information systems.
This event has been canceled.
(No Subject)
Thursday Aug 22, 2024 ⋅ 10am – 11am
Central European Time - Paris
Organizer
Luffroy Raphaël
r.luffroy(a)gmail.com
Guests
Luffroy Raphaël - organizer
corpora(a)list.elra.info
~~//~~
Invitation from Google Calendar: https://calendar.google.com/calendar/
You are receiving this email because you are an attendee on the event. To
stop receiving future updates for this event, decline this event.
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Learn more https://support.google.com/calendar/answer/37135#forwarding
Dear Colleagues,
Please notice the deadline extension for the next NARNiHS Annual Meeting in
2025. There is still time to submit your abstract! We look forward to
seeing you in Philadelphia!
*Call for Abstracts*
*NARNiHS 2025North American Research Network in Historical
SociolinguisticsSeventh Annual Meeting*
*100% IN PERSONCo-Located with the Linguistic Society of America (LSA)
Annual Meeting*
*Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA9-12 January 2025*
We encourage our fellow historical sociolinguists and scholars from related
fields from our global scholarly community (in addition to North America)
to join us in Philadelphia for our Seventh Annual Meeting.
*NEW abstract submission deadline: Friday, 30 August 2024, 11:59 PM US
Eastern Time.*
Please see our call for abstracts below and send us your latest work in
historical sociolinguistics!
—————————— Call for Abstracts ——————————
The North American Research Network in Historical Sociolinguistics
(NARNiHS) is accepting abstracts for its Seventh Annual Meeting
(NARNiHS 2025) in Philadelphia, Thursday, January 9 – Sunday, January 12,
2025.
*NEW! deadline for receipt of abstracts: Friday, 30 August 2024, 11:59 PM
US Eastern Time.*
NARNiHS welcomes abstracts in all areas of historical sociolinguistics,
which is understood as the application/development of sociolinguistic
theories, models, and methods for the study of historical language
variation and change over time, or more broadly, the study of the
interaction of language and society in historical periods and from
historical perspectives. Thus, a wide range of linguistic areas,
subdisciplines, and methodologies easily find their place within the field,
and we encourage submission of abstracts that reflect this broad scope.
Abstracts will be accepted for both 20-minute papers and posters. Please
note that, at the NARNiHS annual meeting, poster presentations are an
integral part of the conference (not second-tier presentations). Abstracts
will be assigned a paper or a poster presentation based on determinations
in the review process about the most effective format for the submission.
However, if you prefer that your submission be considered primarily for
poster presentation, please specify this in your abstract.
Abstracts will be evaluated on the following criteria:
● explicit discussion of which theoretical frameworks, methodological
protocols, and analytical strategies are being applied or critiqued;
● sufficient (if brief) presentation of data sources and examples to allow
reviewers a clear understanding of the scope and claims of the research;
● clear articulation of how the research advances knowledge in the field of
historical sociolinguistics.
Abstracts should also be anonymized to allow for blind peer review. Failure
to adhere to these criteria will significantly increase the likelihood of
non-acceptance (see also point (c) below).
General Requirements:
1) Abstracts must be submitted electronically, using the following link:
https://easyabs.linguistlist.org/conference/NARNiHS_2025/
2) Authors may submit a maximum of two abstracts: one single-author
abstract and one co-authored abstract.
3) Authors may not submit identical abstracts for presentation at
the NARNiHS meeting and at the LSA Annual Meeting or one of the other LSA
Sister Societies (ADS, ANS, NAAHoLS, SCiL, SPCL, SSILA).
4) Specify in the abstract if you prefer that your submission be considered
primarily for a poster presentation.
5) After an abstract has been submitted, no changes of author, title, or
wording of the abstract, other than those due to typographical errors, are
permitted. If accepted, authors will be contacted for a final version for
the abstract booklet.
6) Papers or posters must be delivered as projected in the abstract or
represent bona fide developments of the same research.
7) Authors are expected to attend the conference in-person and present
their own papers and posters. This will not be a hybrid event.
Abstract Format Guidelines:
a) Abstracts must be submitted in PDF format.
b) Abstracts must fit on one standard 8.5×11 inch page, with margins no
smaller than 1 inch and a font style and size no smaller than Times New
Roman 12 point. All additional content (visualizations, trees, tables,
figures, captions, examples, and references) must fit on a single (1)
additional page. No exceptions to these requirements are allowed.
c) Anonymize your abstract. We realize that sometimes it is not possible to
attain complete anonymity, but there is a difference between “inability to
anonymize completely” (due to the nature of the research) and “careless
non-anonymizing” (for example: “In Jones 2021, I describe…”). In addition,
be sure to anonymize your PDF file (you may do so in Adobe Acrobat Reader
by clicking on “File”, then “Properties”, removing your name if it appears
in the “Author” line of the “Description” tab, and re-saving before
submitting it). Please be aware that abstract file names might not be
automatically anonymized by the system; do not use your name (e.g.
Smith_Abstract.pdf) when saving your abstract in PDF format, rather, use
non-identifying information (e.g. HistSoc4Lyfe_NARNiHS.pdf). Your name
should only appear in the online form accompanying your abstract
submission. Papers that are not sufficiently anonymized wherever possible
(whether in the text of the abstract or in the metadata of the digital
file) risk being rejected.
Contact us at *NARNiHistSoc(a)gmail.com <NARNiHistSoc(a)gmail.com>* with any
questions.
Carolina Amador-Moreno (on behalf of the organising committee).
Call for System Demonstrations (COLING 2025) https://coling2025.org/calls/system_demonstrations/
Important Dates
All deadlines are 11:59PM UTC-12:00 (“anywhere on Earth”).
Submissions due September 30, 2024
Notifications November 21, 2024
Camera-ready (PDF) due December 1, 2024
Conference January 19-24, 2025
Invitation for Submission
The COLING 2025 Demonstration Program Committee invites proposals for system demonstrations, which can range from early prototypes to mature systems. The demonstration program is part of the main conference program and aims at showcasing working systems that address a wide range of conference topics. The session will provide opportunities to exchange ideas gained from the practical implementation of NLP systems and to obtain feedback from expert users.
All accepted demos are published in a companion volume of the conference proceedings. We expect at least one of the authors to present a live demo during a demo session at COLING 2025, with an accompanying poster.
COLING 2025 will be held in Abu Dhabi from January 19th to 24th, 2025.
The COLING conference has a history that dates back to the 1960s, and regularly attracts more than 700 delegates. The conference has developed into one of the premier Computational Linguistics (CL) and Natural Language Processing (NLP) conferences worldwide and is a major international event for the presentation of new research results and for the demonstration of new systems and techniques in the broad field of CL and NLP.
Topics of Interest
COLING 2025 solicits demonstrations on original and unpublished research on topics, including, but not limited to:
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.
Submitted systems may be of the following types:
Natural Language Processing systems or system components
Application systems using language technology components
Software tools or API for computational linguistics research
Software for evaluating natural language processing systems
Software supporting learning or education
Tools for data visualization and annotation
Open-sourced large language models and their applications
Development tools
Please note: Commercial products and services are welcome; however, sales and marketing activities are not appropriate in the Demonstrations Program.
Submissions
The submissions should address the following questions:
What problem does the proposed system address?
Why is the system important and what is its impact?
What is the novel in the approach/technology on which this system is based?
Who is the target audience?
How does the system work?
How does it compare with existing systems?
How is the system licensed?
There are two parts to the submission, the paper and a video.
Paper
The maximum submission length is 6 pages, but with extra space for an optional ethics/broader impact statement (only necessary if you think you may want to preempt reviewer questions, given the conference’s ethics policy) and unlimited pages for references. Accepted papers will be given one additional page of content so that reviewers’ comments can be taken into account.
Papers must be submitted in English and must conform to the official COLING 2025 templates available from the link below; the only acceptable format for submissions is PDF. Your paper does not need to be anonymous (see Reviewing Policy). Any papers that do not follow the official style guidelines and page limits will be automatically rejected.
Video
A short (max. 2 minutes) video demonstrating the system. This video will be used to evaluate the paper but won’t be published unless requested.
A screencast with audio narration is a natural choice for demos that can be presented on a screen. Otherwise, a video of a user interacting with the system can be used.
The production quality of the video is not of interest. Hence, we encourage the videos to be simply a screencast of the software that is getting demoed, with zero to minimal editing efforts.
We recommend that you publish your video to YouTube or another website and include the link in your paper. If you prefer not to publicly upload a screencast, please submit the video (in MP4 format) as supplementary material when you submit your paper.
How to Submit
Submission and reviewing will be managed in the START system: https://softconf.com/coling2025/demosCL25/
Ethics
COLING 2025 adopts the ACL Ethics Policy.
Multiple Submission Policy
Papers which are submitted to the COLING 2025 demo session cannot be under review for other conferences or journals at the same time, or for other tracks at COLING 2025 (e.g. the main session). 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.
Reviewing Policy
Reviewing will be single-blind, so authors do not need to conceal their identity. The paper should include the authors’ names and affiliations. Self-references are also allowed. Relevant papers that meet formatting requirements will be assessed on the basis of their relevance to the demo track, contribution, clarity, completeness, and novelty.
Demo Session Chairs
Contact email: coling2025demos(a)googlegroups.com
Tilman Becker, Czech Institute of Informatics, Robotics, and Cybernetics
Mark Dras, Macquarie University
Brodie Mather, Florida Institute for Human & Machine Cognition
*International Conference on CMC and Social Media Corpora for the Humanities*
September 5-6, 2024, Université Côte d'Azur, Nice, France
Dear all,
The 11th International Conference on CMC and Social Media Corpora for the Humanities (CMC-Corpora) will be held at the Université Côte d'Azur, Nice, France in collaboration with the Consortium CORpus, Langues et Interactions (CORLI) and the laboratory Bases, Corpus, Langage (BCL) of the Université Côte d'Azur...
... And registrations are available here: https://dr20.azur-colloque.fr/inscription/fr/194/inscription
We encourage you to register early to secure your spot and take advantage of early bird discounts - up until June 28th!
We look forward to seeing you there!
Warm regards,
The organizing committee:
Céline POUDAT (CORLI, BCL), Marie CHANDELIER (BCL), Mathilde GUERNUT (CORLI), Christophe PARISSE (CORLI), Minerva ROJAS (BCL), Simona RUGGIA (BCL)
Conference website: https://cmc-corpora-nice.sciencesconf.org/
Dear community,
Could you recommend any PhD programs in NLP, Responsible AI, or
Interpretability that can be taken *online*?
I have a very talented Master's student, Nazarii Drushchak
<https://www.linkedin.com/in/nazarii-drushchak-bb46781a7/>, who'd like to
pursue a PhD but cannot leave Ukraine due to the war.
Thanks in advance!
Kindest regards,
Mariana
Call for Participation
Shared Task for the 2nd Workshop of AI Werewolf and Dialog System
(AIWolfDial2024) at the 17th International Natural Language Generation
conference (INLG 2024)
# Summary
Recent achievements of generation models, e.g. ChatGPT, are gathering
greater attentions. However, there is still room to investigate LLMs
could sufficiently able to handle coherent responses, longer contexts,
common grounds, and logics.
Werewolf is a social, hidden identity game that requires debate
between players and coalition building. The goal of our AIWerewolf
contest is to build an AI agent that is able to play this game against
other AI.
# Schedule
Shared tasks
July 28th, 2024 Registration
August 4th, 2024 Preliminary run (self-match game)
mid August, 2024 Formal run (multi-agent game)
Workshop
August 18th, 2024 Paper submission deadline (submissions should be via
the Sontconf system, see our Call for Papers)
August 25th, 2024 Notifications of the paper accpetance
August 30th, 2024 Camera ready paper deadline
Sep 24th, 2024 Workshop (planned in pm) in Tokyo
Sep 23-27, 2024 INLG conference
Our shared task is held as a part of our AIWolfDial 2024 workshop at
INLG 2024 (17th International Natural Language Generation Conference),
which will be held in Tokyo from September 23th to 27th. It is not
mandatry for our shared task participants to attend the INLG 2024
conference, but encouraged to submit thier papers to the workshop.
Please refer to our websites for the details including technical requirments:
https://sites.google.com/view/aiwolfdial2024-inlg
We have a seperate call for papers of our workshop.
# Why AI Werewolf?
Recent achievements of generation models, e.g. ChatGPT, are gathering
greater attentions. However, such a huge language model would not be
sufficiently able to handle coherent responses, longer contexts,
common grounds, and logics.
The AIWolfDial 2024 contest, which is an international open contest
for automatic players of the conversation game "Mafia", requires
players not just to communicate but to infer, persuade, deceive other
players via coherent logical conversations, while having the
role-playing non-task-oriented chats as well. We believe that this
contest reveals current issues in the recent huge language models,
showing directions of next breakthrough in the NLP area.
From the viewpoint of Game AI area, players must hide information, in
contrast to perfect information games such as chess or Reversi. Each
player acquires secret information from other players' conversations
and behavior and acts by hiding information to accomplish their
objectives. Players are required persuasion for earning confidence,
and speculation for detecting fabrications.
Participants must build an artificial intelligence agent that can play
the werewolf game as humans do, using natural language. Participant
agents will be evaluated by a panel of judges, who will grade the
subjective quality of the dialog generated by the agent, in addition
to their win rates. Agents must communicate in Japanese or English.
# Registration
A team should send a mail to aiwolf [at] kanolab.net (replace at by
@), describing your team name, a contact e-mail address, names and
affiliations of its members (please mark a contact person when a team
consists of multiple members), communication language (English and/or
Japanese) of your agent, ssh public key and your preferred user name
to connect to our game server. Registration is free.
# System Evaluation
Participants should submit a paper to the workshop, or a system design
description document to the organizers. In addition to the win rates,
reviewers will perform subjective evaluations on the game logs of a
self-match games and multi-agent games, using following criteria:
A Natural utterance expressions
B Contextually natural conversation
C Coherent (not contradictory) conversation
D Coherent game actions (vote, attack, divine) with conversation contents
E Diverse utterance expressions, including coherent characterization
Please note that vague utterances that could be used regardless of
context are not always natural in the werewolf game.
The top-ranking teams will be awarded prizes and gifts from SpiralAI,
a company developing its own LLM for colloquial multi-turn
conversations.
# Sponser
Spiral.AI Inc, Japan
# Organizers
Organizers and Program Commitee:
Yoshinobu Kano, Shizuoka University, Japan
Claus Aranha, Tsukuba University
Takashi Otsuki, Yamagata University, Japan
Fujio Toriumi, The University of Tokyo, Japan
Hirotaka Osawa, Keio University, Japan
Daisuke Katagami, Tokyo Polytechnic University, Japan
Michimasa Inaba, The University of Electro-Communications, Japan
Kei Harada, The University of Electro-Communications, Japan
Takeshi Ito, The University of Electro-Communications, Japan
Local Organizers:
Neo Watanabe, Shizuoka University, Japan
Kaito Kagaminuma, Shizuoka University, Japan
Yuto Sahashi, Shizuoka University, Japan
On behalf of the AIWolf organizers,
Yoshinobu Kano
Associate Professor, Shizuoka University
kano(a)inf.shizuoka.ac.jp
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Call for Papers
The 2nd International Workshop of AI Werewolf and Dialog System (AIWolfDial2024)
Collocated with INLG 2024 conference, September 23-27, 2024, Tokyo, Japan
https://sites.google.com/view/aiwolfdial2024-inlg
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
< Workshop aims >
Recent achievements of generation models, e.g. ChatGPT, are gathering
greater attentions. However, such a huge language model would not be
sufficiently able to handle coherent responses, longer contexts,
common grounds, and logics.
The AIWolfDial 2024 contest is held as a part of this AIWolfDial2024
workshop. This is an international open contest for automatic players
of the conversation game "Mafia", requires players not just to
communicate but to infer, persuade, deceive other players via coherent
logical conversations, while having the role-playing non-task-oriented
chats as well. We believe that this contest reveals current issues in
the recent huge language models, showing directions of next
breakthrough in the NLP area.
From the viewpoint of Game AI area, players must hide information, in
contrast to perfect information games such as chess or Reversi. Each
player acquires secret information from other players' conversations
and behavior and acts by hiding information to accomplish their
objectives. Players are required persuasion for earning confidence,
and speculation for detecting fabrications.
We call for papers which include following topics but not limited to:
- AI werewolf agents for natural language and/or protocols
- Natural language processing and LLMs for games
- Corpora, resources, analysis on conversation games
- Natural language processing for human relationships
- Natural language processing for logic and strategy
- Imperfect information game and natural language
- Deceiving and persuasion by automatic agents
- Evaluation of dialog systems using games
< Important dates >
August 18th, 2024 Paper submission deadline (submissions should be via
the Sontconf system, see our Call for Papers)
August 25th, 2024 Notifications of the paper accpetance
August 30th, 2024 Camera ready paper deadline
Sep 24th, 2024 Workshop (planned in pm) in Tokyo
Sep 23-27, 2024 INLG conference
< Submission >
We call for short papers and long papers as same as the INLG main
conference, both for shared task papers and papers in general. Please
use the ACL format as specified in the INLG conference webpage.
Submission site will open soon.
< Website >
https://sites.google.com/view/aiwolfdial2024-inlg
< Shared task >
Please refer to our call for participation sent separately, which is
shown in our workshop website.
< Committee >
Contact
E-mail to aiwolf at kanolab.net (replace at by @)
# Organizers
Organizers and Program Commitee:
Yoshinobu Kano, Shizuoka University, Japan
Claus Aranha, Tsukuba University
Takashi Otsuki, Yamagata University, Japan
Fujio Toriumi, The University of Tokyo, Japan
Hirotaka Osawa, Keio University, Japan
Daisuke Katagami, Tokyo Polytechnic University, Japan
Michimasa Inaba, The University of Electro-Communications, Japan
Kei Harada, The University of Electro-Communications, Japan
Takeshi Ito, The University of Electro-Communications, Japan
Local Organizers:
Neo Watanabe, Shizuoka University, Japan
Kaito Kagaminuma, Shizuoka University, Japan
Yuto Sahashi, Shizuoka University, Japan
On behalf of the AIWolf organizers,
Yoshinobu Kano
Associate Professor, Shizuoka University
kano(a)inf.shizuoka.ac.jp
== 12th NLP4CALL, Tórshavn, Faroe Islands==
The workshop series on Natural Language Processing (NLP) for Computer-Assisted Language Learning (NLP4CALL) is a meeting place for researchers working on the integration of Natural Language Processing and Speech Technologies in CALL systems and exploring the theoretical and methodological issues arising in this connection. The latter includes, among others, insights from Second Language Acquisition (SLA) research, on the one hand, and promote development of “Computational SLA” through setting up Second Language research infrastructure(s), on the other.
The intersection of Natural Language Processing (or Language Technology / Computational Linguistics) and Speech Technology with Computer-Assisted Language Learning (CALL) brings “understanding” of language to CALL tools, thus making CALL intelligent. This fact has given the name for this area of research – Intelligent CALL, ICALL. As the definition suggests, apart from having excellent knowledge of Natural Language Processing and/or Speech Technology, ICALL researchers need good insights into second language acquisition theories and practices, as well as knowledge of second language pedagogy and didactics. This workshop invites therefore a wide range of ICALL-relevant research, including studies where NLP-enriched tools are used for testing SLA and pedagogical theories, and vice versa, where SLA theories, pedagogical practices or empirical data are modeled in ICALL tools.
The NLP4CALL workshop series is aimed at bringing together competences from these areas for sharing experiences and brainstorming around the future of the field.
We welcome papers:
- that describe research directly aimed at ICALL;
- that demonstrate actual or discuss the potential use of existing Language and Speech Technologies or resources for language learning;
- that describe the ongoing development of resources and tools with potential usage in ICALL, either directly in interactive applications, or indirectly in materials, application or curriculum development, e.g. learning material generation, assessment of learner texts and responses, individualized learning solutions, provision of feedback;
- that discuss challenges and/or research agenda for ICALL
- that describe empirical studies on language learner data.
This year a special focus is given to work done on error detection/correction and feedback generation.
We encourage paper presentations and software demonstrations describing the above- mentioned themes primarily, but not exclusively, for the Nordic languages.
==Shared task==
NEW for this year is the MultiGED shared task on token-level error detection for L2 Czech, English, German, Italian and Swedish, organized by the Computational SLA working group.
For more information, please see the Shared Task website: https://github.com/spraakbanken/multiged-2023
==Invited speakers==
This year, we have the pleasure to announce two invited talks.
The first talk is given by Marije Michel from the University of Amsterdam.
The second talk is given by Pierre Lison from the Norwegian Computing Center.
==Submission information==
Authors are invited to submit long papers (8-12 pages) alternatively short papers (4-7 pages), page count not including references.
We will be using the NLP4CALL template for the workshop this year. The author kit can be accessed here, alternatively on Overleaf:
<https://spraakbanken.gu.se/sites/default/files/2023/NLP4CALL%20workshop%20t…>
<https://spraakbanken.gu.se/sites/default/files/2023/nlp4call%20template.doc>
<https://www.overleaf.com/latex/templates/nlp4call-workshop-template/qqqzqqy…>
Submissions will be managed through the electronic conference management system EasyChair <https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=nlp4call2023>. Papers must be submitted digitally through the conference management system, in PDF format. Final camera-ready versions of accepted papers will be given an additional page to address reviewer comments.
Papers should describe original unpublished work or work-in-progress. Papers will be peer reviewed by at least two members of the program committee in a double-blind fashion. All accepted papers will be collected into a proceedings volume to be submitted for publication in the NEALT Proceeding Series (Linköping Electronic Conference Proceedings) and, additionally, double-published through the ACL anthology, following experiences from the previous NLP4CALL editions (<https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/venues/nlp4call/>).
==Important dates==
03 April 2023: paper submission deadline
21 April 2023: notification of acceptance
01 May 2023: camera-ready papers for publication
22 May 2023: workshop date
==Organizers==
David Alfter (1), Elena Volodina (2), Thomas François (3), Arne Jönsson (4), Evelina Rennes (4)
(1) Gothenburg Research Infrastructure for Digital Humanities, Department of Literature, History of Ideas, and Religion, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
(2) Språkbanken, Department of Swedish, Multilingualism, Language Technology, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
(3) CENTAL, Institute for Language and Communication, Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium
(4) Department of Computer and Information Science, Linköping University, Sweden
==Contact==
For any questions, please contact David Alfter, david.alfter(a)gu.se
For further information, see the workshop website <https://spraakbanken.gu.se/en/research/themes/icall/nlp4call-workshop-serie…>
Follow us on Twitter @NLP4CALL <https://twitter.com/NLP4CALL/>
CALL FOR ABSTRACTS
The Annual Meeting of the German Society for Linguistics (https://dgfs.de/en/) features a poster session for presenting work in computational linguistics. We invite the submission of abstracts for the Computational Linguistics poster session of the 47th annual meeting of the German Linguistic Society (DGfS), hosted by the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz. We invite submissions from all areas of computational linguistics and natural language processing, ranging from machine translation and information retrieval to speech and dialogue systems and cognitive modeling. We especially encourage students and junior researchers to participate.
The poster session is organized by the Special Interest Group on Computational Linguistics of the DGfS (https://dgfs.de/en/cl/general).
Conference webpage: https://converia.uni-mainz.de/frontend/index.php?sub=167
DATES
- Abstract submission due: October 25, 2024
- Notification of acceptance: November 8, 2024
- Short abstract (for conference website/brochure) due: November 15, 2024
- Conference dates: March 4-7, 2025
SUBMISSION
Anonymous one-page abstract (A4) in PDF format (12pt). Submissions can be in German or English.
Please submit your abstract via email to: annette.hautli-janisz(a)uni-passau.de
Dear all,
EMNLP 2024 organisers are committed to making EMNLP 2024 a huge success.
As we commence the review process, we are looking for volunteers for
ethics reviewing of EMNLP submissions. Please consider applying through
'https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScLyoxN3CDIeUbQbluh4XQK38fg8AMMNqe…'.
Everyone is welcome! We especially invite people from diverse
geographical locations and demographic identities to ensure diversity of
opinions in the review process.
36th European Summer School in Logic, Language and Information (ESSLLI 2025)
July 28-August 8, 2025, Ruhr University Bochum, Germany
https://2025.esslli.eu/
(Please note that the Website is not currently online, but will soon be.)
Important Dates
=========================
*July 10, 2024:* Deadline for submitting course/workshop titles
*July 24, 2024:* Deadline for submitting course/workshop proposals
*October 15, 2024:* Notification sent to course/workshop proposers
Note that submitting a proposal requires that the person submitting it has
an OpenReview profile. Profiles created without an institutional email may
go through a moderation process that can take up to two weeks to be
activated. Profiles created with an institutional email are activated
automatically.
Introduction
=========================
Under the auspices of the Association for Logic, Language, and Information
(FoLLI), the European Summer School in Logic, Language, and Information
(ESSLLI) runs every year. Except for 2021, when the school was virtual, it
runs in a different European country each year. It takes place over two
weeks in the summer, hosts approximately 50 different courses at levels
that run from foundational to introductory to advanced, and attracts around
400 participants from all over the world.
Since 1989, ESSLLI has been providing outstanding interdisciplinary
educational opportunities in the fields of Computer Science, Cognitive
Science, Linguistics, Logic, Philosophy, and beyond. It comes from a
community which recognizes that advances in our common areas require the
contributions of multiple interrelated disciplines.
The main focus of ESSLLI is the interface between linguistics, logic and
computation, with special emphasis on human linguistic and cognitive
ability. Courses, both introductory and advanced, cover a wide variety of
topics within the combined areas of interest: Logic and Computation,
Computation and Language, and Language and Logic. Workshops are also
organized, providing opportunities for in-depth discussion of issues at the
forefront of research, as well as a series of invited evening lectures.
Topics and Format
=========================
Proposals for courses and workshops at ESSLLI 2025 are invited in all areas
of Logic, Linguistics and Computer Science. Cross-disciplinary and
innovative topics are particularly encouraged. During submission you will
be asked to select one of three tracks “Language and Computation (LaCo)”,
“Language and Logic (LaLo)”, “Logic and Computation (LoCo)”.
Each course and workshop will consist of five 90 minute sessions, offered
daily (Monday-Friday) in a single week. Proposals for two-week courses
should be structured and submitted as two independent one-week courses,
e.g. as an introductory course followed by an advanced one. In such cases,
the ESSLLI Program Committee reserves the right to accept just one of the
two proposals.
All instructional and organizational work at ESSLLI is performed completely
on a voluntary basis, so as to keep participation fees to a minimum.
However, organizers and instructors have their registration fees waived,
and are reimbursed for travel and accommodation expenses up to a level to
be determined and communicated with the proposal notification. ESSLLI can
only guarantee reimbursement for at most one course/workshop organizer, and
cannot guarantee full reimbursement of travel costs for lecturers or
organizers from outside of Europe. The ESSLLI organizers would appreciate
any help in controlling the School's expenses by seeking partial or
complete coverage of travel and accommodation expenses from other sources.
Categories
=========================
Each proposal should fall under one of the following categories.
Foundational Courses
-------------------------------------------
Such courses are designed to present the basics of a research area, to
people with no prior knowledge in that area. They should be of elementary
level, without prerequisites in the course's topic, though possibly
assuming a level of general scientific maturity in the relevant discipline.
They should enable researchers from related disciplines to develop a level
of comfort with the fundamental concepts and techniques of the course's
topic, thereby contributing to the interdisciplinary nature of our research
community.
Introductory Courses
-------------------------------------------
Introductory courses are central to ESSLLI's mission. They are intended to
introduce a research field to students, young researchers, and other
non-specialists, and to foster a sound understanding of its basic methods
and techniques. Such courses should enable researchers from related
disciplines to develop some comfort and competence in the topic considered.
Introductory courses in a cross-disciplinary area may presuppose general
knowledge of the related disciplines.
Advanced Courses
-------------------------------------------
Advanced courses are targeted primarily to graduate students who wish to
acquire a level of comfort and understanding in the current research of a
field.
Workshops
-------------------------------------------
Workshops focus on specialized topics, usually of current interest.
Workshop organizers are responsible for soliciting papers and selecting the
workshop program. They are also responsible for publishing proceedings if
they decide to have proceedings.
Proposal Guidelines
=========================
Course and workshop proposals should closely follow these guidelines to
ensure full consideration.
Course and Workshop proposals can be submitted by no more than two
lecturers/organizers and can be presented by no more than these two
lecturers/organizers. All instructors and organizers must possess a PhD or
equivalent degree by the submission deadline.
Course proposals should mention explicitly the intended course category.
Proposals for introductory courses should indicate the intended level, for
example as it relates to standard textbooks and monographs in the area.
Proposals for advanced courses should specify the prerequisites in detail.
Proposals of Courses given at ESSLLI in the previous year will have a lower
priority of being accepted in the current year.
Proposals must be in PDF format and include all the following information:
1. Personal information for each proposer: Name, affiliation, contact
address, email, homepage (optional)
2. General proposal information: Title, category
3. Contents information:
a. Abstract of up to 150 words
b. Motivation and description (up to two pages)
c. Tentative outline
d. Expected level and prerequisites
e. Appropriate references (e.g. textbooks, monographs, proceedings,
surveys)
4. Information required of course proposers:
a. Will the course appeal to students outside of the main discipline of
the course?
b. What experience does the proposer have in presenting an intensive
one-week interdisciplinary setting?
c. What evidence is there that the course proposer is an excellent
lecturer?
5. Information required of workshop organizers:
a. Information on relevant preceding meetings and events, if applicable
b. Information about potential external funding for participants.
Submission Information
=========================
By *July 10, 2024*, proposers are asked to submit at least the name(s) of
the instructor(s), the ESSLLI area+course level and a title and short
abstract for the proposed course/workshop.
By *July 24, 2024*, course proposers must complete their submission by
uploading a PDF with the actual proposal as detailed above.
Submission Portal
=========================
Please* submit your proposals to*
https://openreview.net/group?id=ESSLLI.eu/2025/Summer_School_Proposals
Note that submitting a proposal requires that the person submitting it has
an OpenReview profile. Profiles created without an institutional email may
go through a moderation process that can take up to two weeks to be
activated. Profiles created with an institutional email are activated
automatically.
EACSL Sponsorship
=================
The EACSL will support one Logic and Computation course or workshop
addressing topics of interest to Computer Science Logic (CSL) conferences.
The selected course or workshop will be designated an EACSL course/workshop
in the programme. If you wish to be considered for this, please indicate it
in your proposal.
Organizing Committee
=========================
Tatjana Scheffler (Ruhr University Bochum, chair)
Maria Berger (Ruhr University Bochum)
Maike Buchin (Ruhr University Bochum)
Daniel Gutzmann (Ruhr University Bochum)
Stephanie Heimgartner (Ruhr University Bochum)
Kristina Liefke (Ruhr University Bochum)
Hannah Seemann (Ruhr University Bochum)
Christian Straßer (Ruhr University Bochum)
Katharina Turgay (Ruhr University Bochum)
Thomas Zeume (Ruhr University Bochum)
Program Committee
=========================
Balder ten Cate (ILLC, University of Amsterdam, chair)
Daniel Gutzman (Ruhr University of Bochum, local co-chair)
Area Chairs Language and Computation (LaCo)
-------------------------------------------
- Nicholas Asher (IRIT/CNRS Toulouse)
- Martha Lewis (ILLC, University Amsterdam)
- Valerio Basile (University of Turin)
Area Chairs Language and Logic (LaLo)
-------------------------------------------
- Daniel Altshuler (Oxford University)
- Elin McCready (Aoyama Gakuin University)
- Judith Tonhauser (University of Stuttgart)
Area Chairs Logic and Computation (LoCo)
-------------------------------------------
- Luca Reggio (University College London)
- Leopoldo Bertossi (Skema Business School & Carleton University)
- Anupam Das (University of Birmingham)
Publicity Chair: Søren Knudstorp (ILLC, University of Amsterdam)
ESSLLI Steering Committee
=========================
Jakub Szymanik (University of Trento) (chair)
Magdalena Ortiz (TU Wien)
Roman Kuznets (TU Wien) (secretary)
Mehrnoosh Sadrzadeh (University College London)
Lonneke van der Plas (Idiap Research Institute)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
CLiC-it 2024 - Tenth Italian Conference on Computational Linguistics
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4 - 6 December 2024, Pisa, Italy
https://clic2024.ilc.cnr.it/
This year marks the 10th anniversary of the Italian Conference on
Computational Linguistics, CLiC-it! To commemorate this milestone,
CLiC-it will be hosted in Pisa, just as it was in 2014. Over the years,
CLiC-it has evolved into an important forum for the Italian community of
researchers in Computational Linguistics (CL) and Natural Language
Processing (NLP). CLiC-it aims to promote and disseminate high-quality,
original research covering different aspects of automatic language
processing, involving both written and spoken language. Furthermore, it
seeks to showcase cutting-edge theoretical findings, experimental
methodologies, technologies, and application perspectives.
The spirit of the conference is inclusive. Recognizing the multifaceted
nature of language phenomena and the need for interdisciplinary
expertise, CLiC-it aims to bring together researchers from different
fields including Computational Linguistics and Natural Language
Processing, Linguistics, Cognitive Science, Machine Learning, Computer
Science, Knowledge Representation, Information Retrieval, and Digital
Humanities. CLiC-it welcomes contributions focusing on all languages,
with a particular emphasis on Italian.
CLiC-it 2024 will be held in Pisa, from the 4th to the 6th of December.
CLiC-it is organised by the Italian Association of Computational
Linguistics (AILC -- http://www.ai-lc.it/).
Conference topics
-----------------------------
CLiC-it 2024 aims to have a broad technical program. Relevant topics for
the conference include, but are not limited to (in alphabetical order):
- Computational Historical Linguistics
- Computational Social Science and Cultural Analytics
- Dialogue and Interactive Systems
- Discourse and Pragmatics
- Ethics and NLP
- Generation
- Handwritten Text Recognition
- Information Extraction
- Information Retrieval and Text Mining
- Interpretability and Analysis of Models for NLP
- Language Grounding to Vision, Robotics and Beyond
- Large Language Models
- Linguistic Diversity
- Linguistic Theories, Cognitive Modeling, and Psycholinguistics
- Machine Learning for NLP
- Machine Translation
- Multilingualism and Cross-Lingual NLP
- NLP Applications
- NLP for the Humanities
- Phonology, Morphology, and Word Segmentation
- Pragmatics and Creativity
- Question Answering
- Resources and Evaluation
- Semantics: Lexical, Sentence-level Semantics, Textual Inference, and
Other Areas
- Sentiment Analysis, Stylistic Analysis, and Argument Mining
- Speech and Multimodality
- Summarization
- Syntax: Tagging, Chunking and Parsing
Paper Submission
-----------------------
Submitted papers must describe substantial, original, completed, and
unpublished work. Wherever appropriate, concrete evaluation and analysis
should be included.
CLiC-it 2024 allows for a multiple submission policy. In case of
acceptance of the paper in other venues, the authors must communicate
this information to the CLiC-it 2024 Chairs as soon as possible.
Papers may consist of up to five (5) pages of content, plus unlimited
pages of acknowledgments, references and appendices. Upon acceptance,
final versions of papers will be given one additional page of content,
so that reviewers’ comments can be taken into account.
Papers will be evaluated according to the following criteria:
- soundness of approach
- relevance to computational linguistics
- novelty and clarity of relation with related work
- quality of presentation
- quality of evaluation (if applicable)
- verifiability and ability to replicate (if applicable)
Papers can be either in English or Italian, with the abstract in
English. Accepted papers will be published on-line and will be presented
at the conference either orally or as a poster.
Reviewing will NOT be blind, so there is no need to remove author
information from manuscripts.
Research Communications
----------------------------------
CLiC-it 2024 adopts a parallel submission policy for outstanding papers
accepted in 2023 by major publication venues, namely the major
international CL conferences (workshops excluded) or international
journals. These contributions can be submitted to CLiC-it 2024 as short
research communications. Research communications will not be published
in the conference proceedings, they serve primarily to promote the
dissemination of high-quality research within the Italian CL community.
Submitted research communications must be in the scope of the CLiC-it
2024 conference.
The authors of papers that meet the above criteria are invited to submit
a written (maximum) one-page abstract of the original paper, including
the paper’s title and authors as well as a pointer to the original
conference or journal where the paper was published.
If needed, research communications will undergo a selection process
overseen by the conference chairs. Since these papers have already been
reviewed, the selection criteria will primarily consider their original
publication venue. Priority will be granted to papers that align most
closely with the conference program, ensuring a balanced representation
across various conference topics.
Submission template and procedure
—---------------------------------------------
The required template for CLiC-it submissions must be compatible with
CEUR (https://ceur-ws.org/). You can download the conference-adapted
version at the following links:
LaTeX template:
https://clic2024.ilc.cnr.it/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/CLiC-it-2024-templat…
Word template:
https://clic2024.ilc.cnr.it/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/CLiC_it_2024_templat…
Should you encounter any issues with the compilation (as the CEUR
template has historically presented some challenges and is not
modifiable without risking exclusion from the proceedings), we provide a
read-only Overleaf template
(https://www.overleaf.com/read/sjxmxsssfvyb#c76746). This template can
be accessed and cloned to help resolve any technical difficulties.
Papers and research communications must be submitted through the START
platform using the following link: https://softconf.com/p/clic-it2024
For research communications the appropriate track should be selected.
Awards
---------
To acknowledge the contribution of young researchers to the field, the
title of "best paper" will be awarded to outstanding papers, provided
that a Master's or PhD student is among the authors and presents the
work at the conference. Recipients of this award will be invited to
submit an extended version of their papers to the Italian Journal of
Computational Linguistics (IJCoL).
To recognise excellence in student research as well as promote awareness
of our field, AILC is also conferring the “Emanuele Pianta” prize for
the best Master Thesis (Laurea Magistrale) in Computational Linguistics
submitted at an Italian University. The prize consists of 500 Euros plus
free membership to AILC for one year and free registration to the
upcoming CLiC-it. The complete call is available on the conference
website at: “Calls > AILC Master Thesis Award”.
Invited Speakers
---------
- Giosuè Baggio, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway
- Dieuwke Hupkes, Meta AI Research, Paris, France
Important Dates
---------------
- 15/07/2024: Paper submission deadline: regular papers and research
communications
- 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
People
------
Conference Chairs:
- Felice Dell’Orletta (CNR-ILC)
- Alessandro Lenci (University of Pisa)
- Simonetta Montemagni (CNR-ILC)
- Rachele Sprugnoli (University of Parma)
Program Committee:
- Dominique Brunato (CNR-ILC)
- Cristiano Chesi (IUSS Pavia)
- Roberta Claudia Combei (University of Pavia)
- Diego Frassinelli (University of Konstanz)
- Marco Guerini (Fondazione Bruno Kessler)
- Gianluca Lebani (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice)
- Alessandro Mazzei (University of Torino)
- Johanna Monti (Orientale University of Naples)
- Malvina Nissim (University of Groningen)
- Debora Nozza (Bocconi University)
- Lucia Passaro (University of Pisa)
- Marco Polignano (University of Bari)
- Roberto Zamparelli (University of Trento)
- Fabio Massimo Zanzotto (University of Rome “Tor Vergata”)
Local Organizing Committee:
- Chiara Alzetta (CNR-ILC)
- Serena Auriemma (University of Pisa)
- Alessandro Bondielli (University of Pisa)
- Luca Dini (CNR-ILC)
- Chiara Fazzone (CNR-ILC)
- Martina Miliani (University of Pisa)
Proceedings Chairs:
- Danilo Croce (University of Rome “Tor Vergata”)
- Andrea Zaninello (FBK)
Webmaster:
- Alessio Miaschi (CNR-ILC)
- Marta Sartor (CNR-ILC)
Publicity Chair:
- Sofia Brenna (Fondazione Bruno Kessler)
Further information
-------------------
- Conference website: https://clic2024.ilc.cnr.it/
- Mail: clicit2024(a)gmail.com
- X: https://x.com/CLiC_it_conf
--
Simonetta Montemagni
Istituto di Linguistica Computazionale "Antonio Zampolli" (ILC) - CNR
Area della Ricerca di Pisa
Via Moruzzi 1, 56124 Pisa, ITALY
e-mail simonetta.montemagni(a)ilc.cnr.it
direct tel. no +39 050 3152850
fax no. +39 050 3152839
cell. +39 349 7656651
[apologies for x-posting]
We are looking for a postdoctoral researcher in computational linguistics and/or natural language processing to work on the project "Beyond pixels and words: language technology generation and understanding of spatial language in interaction" (2023-01552) funded by the Swedish Research Council (VR).
Application deadline on August 15, 2023 23:59 (CEST, UTC+2)
Project description: https://web103.reachmee.com/ext/I005/1035/job?site=7&lang=UK&validator=9b89… (English) and https://web103.reachmee.com/ext/I005/1035/job?site=6&lang=SE&validator=3038… (Swedish) and from my personal page (coming soon)
I am looking for candidates with a strong background in computational linguistics, natural language processing (or neighbouring fileds such computer vision and robotics) and machine learning, ideally with experience of computational semantics, language modelling and working with multi-modal representations.
Best regards,
Simon
—
Simon Dobnik
Professor of Computational Linguistics
CLASP & FLoV, University of Gothenburg
https://www.gu.se/en/about/find-staff/simondobnik
TRANSLATING AND THE COMPUTER CONFERENCE 2024 (TC46) - CALL FOR
PRESENTATIONS AND PAPERS
"NAVIGATING THE FUTURE OF LANGUAGE: INNOVATION, INTEGRATION,
INSPIRATION"
https://asling.org/tc46/call-for-papers-cfp/
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.
* Deadline for submitting proposals for full length talks (academic
and user-experience) and short/Poster talks for TC46 is extended to 15
July
* Deadline for submitting proposals for workshops and panels is
extended to 15 August
https://asling.org/tc46/call-for-papers-cfp/
Kind regards,
Amal Haddad