So, everyone wants to host their own (copy of a) large language model
(LLM), but many academic institutions can't spin up multiple LLMs
simultaneously, in perpetuity, nor do I believe the Scientific Funding
Agencies in each country would want to pay for everyone to get a GPU
cluster just to host 500+ copies of tomorrow's version of LLAMA-2(ish).
Are you aware of any effort proposing or planning to host LLMs for use by
researchers in some shared infrastructure? After all, hosting the LLM costs
the same per hour whether 1, 3 or 20 people are calling it, and at most
academic institutions usage would be a little bursty.
Best,
Amanda Stent
--
(they/she)
Director, Davis Institute for AI
Professor, Computer Science
Colby College
Follow the Davis Institute for AI here
<https://web.colby.edu/davisinstitute/>
Want to meet? Calendly - Amanda Stent
<https://calendly.com/amandastentcolby>
We are pleased to announce "Say IT again: International Workshop on Interpreting Technologies" (SAY-IT AGAIN 2023), which will take place on the 2nd and 3rd of November 2023.
Like our previous edition, SAY-IT AGAIN 2023 will also be hybrid, which means that both attendees and participants will have the chance to choose whether they want to attend the workshop ON SITE (at the University of Malaga, Spain) or fully ONLINE, Limited spots!
This workshop seeks to act as a meeting point for researchers working in interpreting- related technologies (CAI tools, machine interpreting, speech to text/speech translation, remote interpreting, etc.); practicing tech-savvy interpreters; companies and freelancers providing services in interpreting as well as companies developing tools for interpreters. In addition to the short papers for presentation, SAY-IT AGAIN will feature invited talks by prominent experts as well as presentations and panels hosted by practitioners. You can see the full provisional programme here: https://lexytrad.es/SAYITAGAIN2023/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/PROGRAMME_SAY…
Registration is available through the following link (until full capacity): https://lexytrad.es/SAYITAGAIN2023/registration/
For further information, you can access SAY-IT AGAIN 2023’s official website: https://lexytrad.es/SAYITAGAIN2023/
Thank you so much in advance for disseminating this event among your colleagues and students who might be interested in the latest advances in field of interpreting technologies.
***First Call for Papers***
**Workshop Description**
LAW-XVIII will be the 18th annual meeting endorsed by the ACL Special
Interest Group for Annotation (SIGANN). It will take place in March 2024 at
EACL in St. Julians, Malta.
Linguistic annotation of natural language corpora is the backbone of
supervised methods in both statistical and neural natural language
processing. Annotated corpora are also a major supporting source of
information for unsupervised methods, multitask learning, and evaluation of
both NLP tools and theories about language within and outside of linguistics.
The LAW-XVIII will provide a forum for presentation and discussion of
innovative research on all aspects of linguistic annotation, including
creation/evaluation of annotation schemes, methods for automatic and manual
annotation, use and evaluation of annotation software and frameworks,
representation of linguistic data and annotations, semi-supervised “human
in the loop” methods of annotation, crowd-sourcing approaches, and more.
The LAW will also provide a forum for annotation researchers to work towards
standardization, best practices, and interoperability of annotation
information and software.
**Special Theme**
The special theme of LAW-XVIII is “Annotation in the Age of Large Language
Models (LLMs).” In addition to LAW’s general topics, we specifically
invite submissions on the following topics:
- Comparison of linguistically annotated datasets vs. datasets created using
large language models. Potential topics include:
- Comparison of models that have been trained on the respective datasets
- Impact of data size of manually annotated resources already available prior
to dataset creation with LLMs
- Is synthetic dataset creation a viable option for non-standard domains,
e.g., the medical domain, where expert knowledge is required?
- Non-performance-related considerations of manual vs. synthetic dataset
creation (e.g., explainability)
- Impact and prevention of test dataset contamination in LLM training
- Usefulness of LLMs for linguistic research (in relation to annotation).
- Any other topics related to the special theme.
**Submissions**
We welcome submissions of long and short papers, posters, and demonstrations
relating to the special theme or any aspect of linguistic annotation,
including:
- Annotation procedures
- Innovative automated and manual strategies for annotation
- Machine learning and knowledge-based methods for automation of corpus
annotation
- Creation, maintenance, and interactive exploration of annotation structures
and annotated data
- Annotation evaluation
- Inter-annotator agreement and other evaluation metrics and strategies
- Qualitative evaluation of linguistic representations
- Innovative means to evaluate annotation quality
- Annotation access and use
- Representation formats/structures for annotations of different phenomena,
especially annotations at multiple levels, and means to explore/manipulate
them
- Linguistic considerations for merging annotations of distinct phenomena
- Annotation schemes, guidelines and standards
- New and innovative annotation schemes, comparison of annotation schemes
- Methodologies and resources for annotation scheme development
- Best practices for annotation procedures and/or development and
documentation of annotation schemes
- Interoperability of annotation formats and/or frameworks among different
systems as well as different tasks, frameworks, modalities, and languages
- Results from the application and evaluation of standards for linguistic
annotation
- Annotation software and frameworks
- Development, evaluation and/or innovative use of annotation software
frameworks
Submissions should report original and unpublished research on topics of
interest to the workshop. We also invite substantiated position papers, in
particular with regard to our special theme. Accepted papers are expected to
be presented at the workshop and will be published in the workshop
proceedings. They should emphasize obtained results rather than intended
work, and should indicate clearly the state of completion of the reported
results.
A paper accepted for presentation at the workshop must not be or have been
presented at any other meeting with publicly available proceedings.
Long/short paper submissions must use the official ACL style templates. Long
papers must not exceed eight (8) pages of content. Short papers and
demonstration papers must not exceed four (4) pages of content. References do
not count against these limits.
Note: The supplementary material does not count towards page limit and should
not be included in the paper, but should be submitted separately using the
appropriate field on the submission website. All submissions must be in PDF
format.
Reviewing of papers will be double-blind. Therefore, the paper must not
include the authors’ names and affiliations or self-references that reveal
the authors’ identity--e.g., "We previously showed (Smith, 1991) ..."
should be replaced with citations such as "Smith (1991) previously showed
...". Papers that do not conform to these requirements will be rejected
without review.
Authors of papers that have been or will be submitted to other meetings or
publications must provide this information to the workshop co-chairs
(law-xviii-2024(a)googlegroups.com). Authors of accepted papers must notify
the program chairs within 10 days of acceptance if the paper is withdrawn for
any reason.
We follow previous and current ACL policy to establish an anonymity period
(from submission to author notification) during which non-anonymous posting
of preprints is not allowed. Also included in that policy are instructions to
reviewers to not rate papers down for not citing recent preprints. Authors
are asked to cite published versions of papers instead of preprint versions
when possible.
Papers can be submitted at https://softconf.com/eacl2024/LAW-XVIII/.
If you have any questions, please feel free to contact the program co-chairs
via e-mail or check the workshop website
(https://sigann.github.io/LAW-XVIII-2024/) for updates.
**Dates**
(All submission deadlines are 11:59 p.m. UTC-12:00 “anywhere on Earth”)
Anonymity period starts: November 18, 2023
Submission of long and short papers: December 18, 2023
ARR Commitment deadline: January 17, 2024
Notification of acceptance: January 20, 2024
Camera-ready papers due: January 30, 2024
Workshop: March 21 or 22, 2024
**Workshop Organizers**
Manfred Stede (Program Co-Chair)
Sophie Henning (Program Co-Chair)
Amir Zeldes (ACL SIGANN President)
Ines Rehbein (ACL SIGANN Secretary)
**Contact**
Website: https://sigann.github.io/LAW-XVIII-2024/
Submission: https://softconf.com/eacl2024/LAW-XVIII/
E-mail: law-xviii-2024(a)googlegroups.com
The journal /Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence
<https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/artificial-intelligence>/ is
arranging a Research Topic on "Advances in Structured Information
Extraction for Large Language Models." As Topic Editors for the issue, we
would like to invite you to contribute a review or research article.
The submission deadline will be /25 March 2024/.
Learn more about the research topic here
https://www.frontiersin.org/research-topics/58745/advances-in-structured-in…
and indicate your interest to contribute by clicking "Participate in this
topic." This will ensure you receive timely reminders from the publishers.
Your cordially,
Dr. Jennifer D'Souza
Prof. Dr. Anisa Rula
*Research Topic Editors*
Dear colleagues,
we are happy to announce the 7th edition of the Translation in Transition conference (https://sites.google.com/view/tt2024). This series of conferences has established itself as a central meeting point for researchers in the field of empirical translation studies through previous editions in Copenhagen, Germersheim, Ghent, Barcelona, Kent and Prague. In its 7th edition held at the Shota Rustaveli State University in Batumi it once again wants to be a forum of discussion for empirical research that is based on any kind of empirical methodology and that advances our knowledge in the fields of translation and interpreting. While the Batumi edition will be open to various topics within empirical translation studies, we also want to put special emphasis on two directions: low-resourced and less-researched language pairs, as well as an interplay between different methods and data types, e.g. combining product and process research.
First Call for Papers
We invite original submissions that deal with any of the conference topics. To encourage a fruitful exchange of ideas and experience among the researchers of various fields of specialization, preference will be given to interdisciplinary contributions that cover two or more of the conference topics.
The submissions are to be made in the form of anonymized extended abstracts that should be between 800 and 1000 words long (excluding references) by February 16, 2024. Apart from a clear outline of the aims and methods of the study, the abstracts should also provide (preliminary) results. The abstracts will be submitted through the open review system (https://openreview.net/group?id=TT/2024/Conference) and reviewed by at least two members of the scientific committee. The accepted contributions will be presented either as oral talks or as posters. All submissions must follow the abstract submission instructions (https://sites.google.com/view/tt2024/submission-instructions).
We welcome contributions (in English) grounded in empirical approaches to studying both interlingual and intralingual translation, as well as theoretical and position papers on the following topics:
* Empirical methods and models (corpus-based, corpus-driven, experimental) or methods derived from computational linguistics and data mining (e.g. computational semantics, pragmatics) applied to translation studies * Presentation of new resources for translation studies (spoken corpora, multimodal corpora, interpreting transcript datasets, corpora of low-resourced languages, lexicons, databases, etc.) * Method and data triangulation: combined use of corpus data and methods and other sources of data * Detection and analysis of specific features of translation (translationese, interpretese, editese, machine translationese, post-editese, etc.) using parallel and comparable corpora * Analysis and interpretation of variation in translation, e.g. variation driven through register/genre, expertise, mode, etc. * Empirical analysis of specialised translation, e.g. legal translation, technical translation and others * Analysis of non-canonical forms of translation/interpreting and multilingual communication * Cognitive and computational insights of variation in translation and translationese * Cognitive modeling of translation processes, including cognitive load measurements * Translation quality assessment and evaluation using corpora or experimental research * Translation in specific settings: between close languages, from a third language, non-native translation, indirect/relay translation, etc. * The use of corpora in translator and/or interpreter training * Improving understanding of translation in the context of NLP * Computer-assisted translation and/or interpreting (CAT/CAI) * Machine translation (MT): analysis, evaluation, selection and preparation of data for MT, ‘machine translationese’Important dates
· Conference abstract submission due: Feb 16, 2024
· Notification of acceptance: April 8, 2024
· Final abstract version due: April 29, 2024
· Registration open: May 6, 2024
· Early-bird registration: June 6, 2024
· Conference date: September 23-25, 2024
The conference is organized by the Department of European Studies, Faculty of Humanities, Batumi Shota Rustaveli State University in Batumi (Georgia) in cooperation with the Institute of Translation Studies and Specialised Communication, University of Hildesheim (Germany).
Local organizing committee at the Batumi Shota Rustaveli State University
Khatuna Beridze, Theona Beridze, Khatuna Diasamidze, Tamta Nagervadze
Program Chairs at the University of Hildesheim
Ekaterina Lapshinova-Koltunski and Silvana Deilen
--
Prof. Dr. Ekaterina Lapshinova-Koltunski
Geschäftsführende Direktorin
Institut für Übersetzungswissenschaft und Fachkommunikation
Fachbereich 3: Sprach und Informationswissenschaften
Stiftung Universität Hildesheim
Lübecker Straße 3
31141 Hildesheim
+49 5121 883-30934
PhD position: Machine Learning for Natural Languages and other sequence data
========================================================= ====
(Computer Science, Computational Linguistics, Physics or similar)
The research group is focusing on getting a deeper understanding of how
modern deep learning methods can be applied to natural languages or
other sequence papers. Our recent achievements include a best paper
award at COLING 2022 and a best theme paper award at ACL 2023. We offer
a PhD position that is topically open and should have a strong focus on
applying machine learning techniques to natural language data or other
sequence data (e.g., string representations of chemical compounds).
The ideal candidate for the position would have:
1. Excellent knowledge of machine learning and deep learning
2. Excellent programming skills
3. Masters degree in Computer Science, Computational Linguistics,
Physics, or similar
Salary: The PhD position will be 75% of full time on the German E13
scale (TV-L) which is about 3144€ per month before tax and social
security contributions. The appointments will be for three years with a
possible extension at 50%.
About the department: The department of Language Science and Technology
is one of the leading departments in the speech and language area in
Europe. The flagship project at the moment is the CRC on Information
Density and Linguistic Encoding. It also runs a significant number of
European and nationally funded projects. In total, it has seven faculty
and around 50 postdoctoral researchers and PhD students. The department
is part of the Saarland Informatics Campus. With 900 researchers, two
Max Planck institutes and the German Research Center for Artificial
Intelligence, it is one of the leading locations for Informatics in
Germany and Europe.
How to apply: Please send us a letter of motivation, a research plan
(max one page), your CV, your transcripts, if available a list of
publications, and the names and contact information of at least two
references, as a single PDF or a link to a PDF if the file size is more
than 5 MB.
Please apply latest by November 20th, 2023. Earlier applications are
welcome and will be processed as they come in.
Contact: Applications and any further inquiries regarding the project
should be directed todietrich.klakow at lsv.uni-saarland.de
<https://mailman.uib.no/listinfo/corpora>
First CFP: The 6th Workshop on Research in Computational Linguistic
Typology and Multilingual NLP (SIGTYP 2024)
To be held at EACL 2024 (March 21 or 22, 2024 Malta)
Website: https://sigtyp.github.io/
Submission website:
https://openreview.net/group?id=eacl.org/EACL/2024/Workshop/SIGTYP
<https://openreview.net/group?id=eacl.org/EACL/2024/Workshop/SIGTYP>
Submission deadline: December 18, 2023 We invite submissions to the 6th
edition of the SIGTYP workshop on Research in Computational Linguistic
Typology and Multilingual NLP, to be held at EACL 2024 on March 21 or
22, 2024.
Workshop description
The aim of the 6th edition of SIGTYP workshop is to act as a platform
and a forum for the exchange of information between typology-related
research, multilingual NLP, and other research areas that can lead to
the development of truly multilingual NLP methods. The workshop is
specifically aimed at raising awareness of linguistic typology and its
potential in supporting and widening the global reach of multilingual
NLP, as well as at introducing computational approaches to linguistic
typology. It will foster research and discussion on open problems, not
only within the active community working on cross- and multilingual NLP
but also inviting input from leading researchers in linguistic typology.
Our workshop will serve as a platform to enable fruitful discussions. In
2024, we additionally focus on bridging the gap between cross-linguistic
and universal annotation, models, and technology.
SIGTYP is the first dedicated venue for typology-related research and
its integration in multilingual NLP. Appropriate topics include (but are
not limited to) the following as they relate to the areas of the workshop:
*
Integration of typological features in language transfer and joint
multilingual learning. In addition to established techniques such as
“selective sharing”, are there alternative ways to encoding
heterogeneous external knowledge in machine learning algorithms?
*
Development of unified taxonomy and resources. Building universal
databases and models to facilitate understanding and processing of
diverse languages.
*
Automatic inference of typological features. The pros and cons of
existing techniques (e.g. heuristics derived from morphosyntactic
annotation, propagation from features of other languages, supervised
Bayesian and neural models) and discussion on emerging ones.
*
Typology and interpretability. The use of typological knowledge for
interpretation of hidden representations of multilingual neural
models, multilingual data generation and selection, and typological
annotation of texts.
*
Improvement and completion of typological databases. Combining
linguistic knowledge and automatic data-driven methods towards the
joint goal of improving the knowledge on cross-linguistic variation
and universals.
*
Linguistic diversity and universals. Challenges of cross-lingual
annotation. Which linguistic phenomena or categories should be
considered universal? How should they be annotated?
*
Language-specific studies to support or contradict universals.
Framing a study on 1-3 languages that would shed more light on common
linguistic structures and properties.
*
Extra topics also include: generation of constructed languages,
universals in diachronic languages changes, information-theoretic
approaches to typology, automated approaches to etymology.
Important Dates (all deadlines are 23:59 AoE)
— December 18, 2023: Paper submission deadline
— January 20, 2024: Notification of acceptance
— January 30, 2024: Camera-ready deadline
— March 21 or 22, 2024: Workshop
Submissions
We invite both extended abstract submissions (non-archival) and general
paper submissions (archival). The accepted submissions will be presented
at the workshop, providing new insights and ideas. Extended abstracts
should describe already published work or work in progress and should
not exceed two (2) pages. This way, we will not discourage researchers
from preferring main conference proceedings, at the same time ensuring
that interesting and thought-provoking research is presented at the
workshop. For general (archival) submissions we accept both long and
short papers. Short papers should not exceed four (4) pages, long papers
should not exceed eight (8) pages papers. Unlimited additional pages are
allowed for the references section in all submission types.
Submissions should be anonymous, without authors or an acknowledgement
section; self-citations should appear in third person.
Submissions must follow the EACL 2024 stylesheet
https://github.com/acl-org/acl-style-files
<https://github.com/acl-org/acl-style-files>; both long and short paper
submissions must follow the two-column format of ACL proceedings. All
submissions must be in PDF format.
These should be submitted via OpenReview:
https://openreview.net/group?id=eacl.org/EACL/2024/Workshop/SIGTYP
<https://openreview.net/group?id=eacl.org/EACL/2024/Workshop/SIGTYP>.
ARR submissions that were rejected or withdrawn from EACL can be
submitted to SIGTYP by January 17, 2024. We will create a web form for
submitting, and announce it at
https://sigtyp.github.io/sigtyp-cfp2024.html by January 15, 2024.
Acceptance decisions will be made based on the existing ARR reviews.
Authors will be notified by January 20, 2024.
Organizing Committee
Michael Hahn, Rena Gao, Saliha Muradoglu, Yulia Otmakhova, Andreas
Shcherbakov, Oleg Serikov, Jinrui Yang, Alexey Sorokin, Priya Rani,
Ritesh Kumar, Ryan Cotterell, Edoardo M. Ponti, Kat Vylomova
Anti-harassment policy
The workshop follows the ACL anti-harassment policy:
https://www.aclweb.org/adminwiki/index.php?title=Anti-Harassment_Policy
<https://www.aclweb.org/adminwiki/index.php?title=Anti-Harassment_Policy>.
Contact
For any inquiries regarding the workshop, please send an email to the
Organizing Committee at sigtyp(a)gmail.com
CODI, 5th Workshop on Computational Approaches to Discourse
2024-03-21 or 22 - EACL 2024 - Malta
** Submission deadline: December 20th, 2023 - No deadline extension **
Website link: https://sites.google.com/view/codi2024
Aims and scope
The last ten years have seen a dramatic improvement in the ability of NLP systems to understand and produce words and sentences. This development has created a renewed interest in discourse phenomena as researchers move towards the processing of long-form text and conversations. There is a surge of activity in discourse parsing, coherence models, text summarization, corpora for discourse level reading comprehension, and discourse related/aided representation learning, to name a few, but the problems in computational approaches to discourse are still substantial. At this juncture, we have organized four Workshops on Computational Approaches to Discourse (CODI) at EMNLP 2020, EMNLP 2021, COLING 2022 and ACL 2023 to bring together discourse experts and upcoming researchers. These workshops have catalyzed work to advance research on discourse level problems and have served as a forum for the discussion of suitable datasets and reliable evaluation methods.
The previous workshops on discourse in machine translation (DiscoMT), linking lexical, sentential and discourse semantics (LSDSem), discourse structure in natural language generation (DSNNLG), discourse relation parsing and treebanking (DISRPT) and coreference (CORBON/CRAC), have shown that there is considerable interest and success in bringing together the community working on specific problems in discourse. We believe that the discourse community will also benefit from a general forum where work ranging from corpus development/analysis to computational models, and evaluation is discussed, and desiderata can be drawn for future progress.
The 5th CODI workshop is planned as a 1 day event which brings together different subcommunities. It will feature invited talks and regular papers. We also accept papers accepted at other major conferences for non-archival presentation, including Findings papers.
Topics of interest
We welcome papers on symbolic and probabilistic approaches, corpus development and analysis, as well as machine and deep learning approaches to discourse. We appreciate theoretical contributions as well as practical applications, including demos of systems and tools. The goal of the workshop is to provide a forum for the community of NLP researchers working on all aspects of discourse.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- discourse structure
- discourse connectives
- discourse relations
- annotation tools and schemes for discourse phenomena
- corpora annotated with discourse phenomena
- discourse parsing
- cross-lingual discourse processing
- cross-domain discourse processing
- anaphora and coreference resolution
- event coreference
- argument mining
- coherence modeling
- discourse and semantics
- discourse in applications such as machine translation, summarization, etc.
- evaluation methodology for discourse processing
Submissions
We solicit three categories of papers: regular (long and short) workshop papers, demos and extended abstracts. Only regular workshop papers and demos will be included in the proceedings as archival publications.
Double submission of papers is allowed but will need to be indicated at submission.
Regular papers must describe original unpublished research. Long papers may consist of up to 8 pages of content, plus unlimited pages for references.
Short papers can be up to 4 pages, plus unlimited pages for references.
Demo submissions may describe systems, tools, visualizations, etc., and may consist of up to 4 pages, plus unlimited pages for references.
Each submission can contain unlimited pages for Appendices but the paper submissions need to remain fully self-contained, as these supplementary materials are completely optional, and reviewers are not even asked to review them.
Extended abstracts can describe work in progress. These may be two pages long (without references). Extended abstracts are non-archival. They will be included in the workshop program and handbook, but will not appear in the workshop proceedings.
Paper accepted or rejected at one of the main conferences
We also invite presentations of paper accepted at another main conference, a specific deadline and submission process will be communicated later on. They will be included in the workshop program and handbook, but will not appear in the workshop proceedings.
We will also consider for publication papers rejected at one of the main conferences (see the direct submission deadline below), authors will have to submit both the paper and the reviews. The submission process will be communicated later on.
Submission website
All submissions must be anonymous and follow the EACL 2024 formatting instructions described here: https://aclrollingreview.org/cfp
Please submit your workshop papers at https://softconf.com/eacl2024/CODI-2024/
Important dates
2023-12-20: CODI papers due
2024-01-17: Direct submission (papers rejected at a main conference)
2024-01-20: Notification of acceptance
2024-01-30: Camera ready deadline for main conference and CODI
2024-03-17 – 2024-03-22: CODI workshop
All deadlines are 11.59 pm UTC -12h ("anywhere on Earth").
Due to the tight schedule, there will be no deadline extension.
Invited Speakers
- Hannah Rohde, University of Edinburgh
- Manfred Stede, Potsdam University
Organizers
Chloé Braud, CNRS-IRIT
Christian Hardmeier, IT University of Copenhagen
Chuyuan (Lisa) Li, University of British Columbia
Jessy Li, University of Texas, Austin
Sharid Loáiciga, University of Gothenburg
Michael Strube, Heidelberg Institute for Theoretical Studies
Amir Zeldes, Georgetown University
To contact the organizers, please send an email to: codi-workshop(a)googlegroups.com
Dear List Members,
Arianna Betti’s group (Concepts in Motion<https://conceptsinmotion.org/>) in data-driven history of philosophy and philosophical ideas from any period and place is inviting expressions of interest from all colleagues and students curious about new data-driven and computational approaches to philosophical texts. We invite expression of interest in internships, individual modules and possible collaboration. We are based at the department of Philosophy at the University of Amsterdam and at the Institute for Logic, Language and Computation (ILLC), but we also work in a hybrid and online research environment.
On the occasion of the imminent launch of the new data-driven project in British Empiricism funded by the Dutch Research Council (NWO), Counting the Bees, we are also launching the <https://conceptsinmotion.org/whats-on/axiom-whats-on/data-driven-history-of…> Data-Driven History of Ideas (DaDriH) Seminar Series<https://conceptsinmotion.org/whats-on/axiom-whats-on/data-driven-history-of…>, a series of online seminars on data formats, tools, and best practices for working with data relevant to the history of philosophy and philosophical ideas. In particular, in this series we will have experts discussing the managing of authority records, identifiers for persons, timelines, and works, as well as infrastructures on which to clean and enrich these data.
The first seminar of the series will be held on Friday October 27th at 14.00 CET:
Speaker: Chiara Latronico
Title: Lessons and recommendations in data practices from the Golden Agents project
Chiara Latronico (Nederlands Instituut voor Beeld & Geluid) will highlight her experience in working with bibliographic data in the Golden Agents project. In this seminar, she will discuss with us linked data standards, models, and tools, with special attention to RDF. Bring your questions to the seminar for a live Q&A session.
If you would like to join the seminar, please register here<https://uva-live.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMpc-utqjkpH9SfG1FuiXoH3tqq1th0X…>.
With best wishes,
Maria Chiara Parisi, on behalf of the Concepts in Motion Team
Post Doc position: Natural Language Processing
========================================
(Computer Science, Computational Linguistics or similar)
The research group is focusing on getting a deeper understanding of how
modern deep learning methods can be applied to natural languages. Our
recent achievements include a best paper award at COLING 2022 and a best
theme paper award at ACL 2023. We offer a PostDoc position that is
topically open and should have a strong focus on applying machine
learning techniques to natural language data. The research should on the
one hand be connected to ongoing research of PhD students and at the
same time pursue a clear new direction.
The ideal candidate for the position would have:
1. Solid experience in natural language processing
2. Excellent knowledge of machine learning and deep learning
3. Be involved, knowledgeable and generous in scientific discussions
with all group members?
4. Excellent programming skills
5. Doctoral degree in Computer Science, Computational Linguistics or
similar
Salary: The PostDoc position will be 100% of full time on the German
E13 scale (TV-L) which is about 4188€ per month before tax and social
security contributions. The appointments will be for two years with a
possible extension.
About the department: The department of Language Science and Technology
is one of the leading departments in the speech and language area in
Europe. The flagship project at the moment is the CRC on Information
Density and Linguistic Encoding. It also runs a significant number of
European and nationally funded projects. In total, it has seven faculty
and around 50 postdoctoral researchers and PhD students. The department
is part of the Saarland Informatics Campus. With 900 researchers, two
Max Planck institutes and the German Research Center for Artificial
Intelligence, it is one of the leading locations for Informatics in
Germany and Europe.
How to apply: Please send us a letter of motivation, a research plan
(max one page), your CV, your transcripts, a list of publications, and
the names and contact information of at least two references, as a
single PDF or a link to a PDF if the file size is more than 5 MB.
Please apply latest by November 20th, 2023. Earlier applications are
welcome and will be processed as they come in.
Contact: Applications and any further inquiries regarding the project
should be directed todietrich.klakow at lsv.uni-saarland.de
<https://mailman.uib.no/listinfo/corpora>