On behalf of Prof. Mark Sandler.
Lyrics generation project using LLMs.
Notice the closing deadline.
From: Mark Sandler <mark.sandler(a)qmul.ac.uk>
I am happy to announce that the Centre for Digital Music is now formally advertising the new research positions I posted last week. One area is lyrics generation and the other is music signal processing (instrument ID, loop ID, lyric transcription). Both are collaborative with London-based music industry companies, session and stage.
These are available immediately and can be offered as either post-doctoral or graduate research assistants, and can be either full- or part-time. Closing date is May 1 2024.
Details can be found here
https://www.qmul.ac.uk/jobs/vacancies/items/9619.htmlhttps://www.qmul.ac.uk/jobs/vacancies/items/9617.html
help
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Today's Topics:
1. WMT 2024: Low-Resource Indic Language Translation. (Santanu Pal)
2. Final CPF: SIGIR eCom'24: May 3rd (Tracy Holloway King)
3. [2nd CFP] Special issue on Abusive Language Detection of the journal Traitement Automatique des Langues (TAL)
(Farah Benamara)
4. [Call for Participation]: GermEval2024 Shared Task GerMS-Detect - Sexism Detection in German Online News Fora @Konvens 2024
(stephanie.gross(a)ofai.at)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Message: 1
Date: Sun, 21 Apr 2024 13:02:42 +0100
From: Santanu Pal <santanu.pal.ju(a)gmail.com>
Subject: [Corpora-List] WMT 2024: Low-Resource Indic Language
Translation.
To: corpora(a)list.elra.info
Message-ID:
<CALdLWwZZ4EJ6Vk5r9xS1b90vGBgtWpfq_PwGJSF=F+UQ6-ZCUg(a)mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
boundary="00000000000043488c06169a1b64"
Dear Colleagues,
We are pleased to inform you that we will be hosting the "Shared Task:
Low-Resource Indic Language Translation" again this year as part of WMT
2024. Following the outstanding success and enthusiastic participation
witnessed in the previous year's edition, we are excited to continue this
important initiative. Despite recent advancements in machine translation
(MT), such as multilingual translation and transfer learning techniques,
the scarcity of parallel data remains a significant challenge, particularly
for low-resource languages.
The WMT 2024 Indic Machine Translation Shared Task aims to address this
challenge by focusing on low-resource Indic languages from diverse language
families. Specifically, we are targeting languages such as Assamese, Mizo,
Khasi, Manipuri, Nyishi, Bodo, Mising, and Kokborok.
For inquiries and further information, please contact us at
lrilt.wmt24(a)gmail.com. Additionally, you can find more details and updates
on the task through the following link: Task Link:
https://www2.statmt.org/wmt24/indic-mt-task.html.
We highly encourage participants to register in advance so that we can
provide updates regarding release dates of data and other relevant
information periodically
To register for the event, please fill out the registration form available
here. (
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSd8LwriqdLLhVNAvUWEcGRJmKuBFQZ9BR_…
)
We look forward to your participation and contributions to advancing
low-resource Indic language translation.
with best regards,
Santanu
The first workshop on evaluating IR systems with Large Language Models
(LLMs) is accepting submissions that describe original research findings,
preliminary research results, proposals for new work, and recent relevant
studies already published in high-quality venues.
Topics of interest
We welcome both full papers and extended abstract submissions on the
following topics, including but not limited to:
- LLM-based evaluation metrics for traditional IR and generative IR.
- Agreement between human and LLM labels.
- Effectiveness and/or efficiency of LLMs to produce robust relevance
labels.
- Investigating LLM-based relevance estimators for potential systemic
biases.
- Automated evaluation of text generation systems.
- End-to-end evaluation of Retrieval Augmented Generation systems.
- Trustworthiness in the world of LLMs evaluation.
- Prompt engineering in LLMs evaluation.
- Effectiveness and/or efficiency of LLMs as ranking models.
- LLMs in specific IR tasks such as personalized search, conversational
search, and multimodal retrieval.
- Challenges and future directions in LLM-based IR evaluation.
Submission guidelines
We welcome the following submissions:
- Previously unpublished manuscripts will be accepted as extended
abstracts and full papers (any length between 1 - 9 pages) with unlimited
references, formatted according to the latest ACM SIG proceedings template
available at http://www.acm.org/publications/proceedings-template.
- Published manuscripts can be submitted in their original format.
All submissions should be made through Easychair:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=llm4eval
All papers will be peer-reviewed (single-blind) by the program committee
and judged by their relevance to the workshop, especially to the main
themes identified above, and their potential to generate discussion. For
already published studies, the paper can be submitted in the original
format. These submissions will be reviewed for their relevance to this
workshop. All submissions must be in English (PDF format).
All accepted papers will have a poster presentation with a few selected for
spotlight talks. Accepted papers may be uploaded to arXiv.org, allowing
submission elsewhere as they will be considered non-archival. The
workshop’s website will maintain a link to the arXiv versions of the papers.
Important Dates
- Submission Deadline: April 25th May 2nd, 2024 (AoE time)
- Acceptance Notifications: May 31st, 2024 (AoE time)
- Workshop date: July 18, 2024
Website
For more information, visit the workshop website:
https://llm4eval.github.io/
Contact
For any questions about paper submission, you may contact the workshop
organizers at llm4eval(a)easychair.org
*First Call For papers: 17th International Natural Language Generation Conference INLG 2024*
We invite the submission of long and short papers, as well as system demonstrations, related to all aspects of Natural Language Generation (NLG), including data-to-text, concept-to-text, text-to-text and vision-to-text approaches. Accepted papers will be presented as oral talks or posters.
The event is organized under the auspices of the Special Interest Group on Natural Language Generation (SIGGEN) (https://aclweb.org/aclwiki/SIGGEN) of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL) (https://aclweb.org/). The event will be held from 23-27 September in Tokyo, Japan. INLG 2024 will be taking place after SIGDial 2024 (18-20 September) nearby in Kyoto.
**Important dates**
All deadlines are Anywhere on Earth (UTC-12)
• START system regular paper submission deadline: May 31, 2024
• ARR commitment to INLG deadline via START system: June 24, 2024
• START system demo paper submission deadline: June 24, 2024
• Notification: July 15, 2024
• Camera ready: August 16, 2024
• Conference: 23-27 September 2024
**Topics**
INLG 2024 solicits papers on any topic related to NLG. General topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
• Large Language Models (LLMs) for NLG
• Affect/emotion generation
• Analysis and detection of automatically generated text
• Bias and fairness in NLG systems
• Cognitive modelling of language production
• Computational efficiency of NLG models
• Content and text planning
• Corpora and resources for NLG
• Ethical considerations of NLG
• Evaluation and error analysis of NLG systems
• Explainability and Trustworthiness of NLG systems
• Generalizability of NLG systems
• Grounded language generation
• Lexicalisation
• Multimedia and multimodality in generation
• Natural language understanding techniques for NLG
• NLG and accessibility
• NLG in speech synthesis and spoken language models
• NLG in dialogue
• NLG for human-robot interaction
• NLG for low-resourced languages
• NLG for real-world applications
• Paraphrasing, summarization and translation
• Personalisation and variation in text
• Referring expression generation
• Storytelling and narrative generation
• Surface realization
• System architectures
**Submissions & Format**
Three kinds of papers can be submitted:
• Long papers are most appropriate for presenting substantial research results and must not exceed eight (8) pages of content, plus unlimited pages of ethical considerations, supplementary material statements, and references. The supplementary material statement provides detailed descriptions to support the reproduction of the results presented in the paper (see below for details). The final versions of long papers will be given one additional page of content (up to 9 pages) so that reviewers' comments can be taken into account.
• Short papers are more appropriate for presenting an ongoing research effort and must not exceed four (4) pages, plus unlimited pages of ethical considerations, supplementary material statements, and references. The final versions of short papers will be given one additional page of content (up to 5 pages) so that reviewers' comments can be taken into account.
• Demo papers should be no more than two (2) pages, including references, and should describe implemented systems relevant to the NLG community. It also should include a link to a short screencast of the working software. In addition, authors of demo papers must be willing to present a demo of their system during INLG 2024.
Submissions should follow ACL Author Guidelines (https://www.aclweb.org/adminwiki/index.php?title=ACL_Author_Guidelines) and policies for submission, review and citation, and be anonymised for double blind reviewing. Please use ACL 2023 style files; LaTeX style files and Microsoft Word templates are available at: https://acl-org.github.io/ACLPUB/formatting.html
Authors must honor the ethical code set out in the ACL Code of Ethics (https://www.aclweb.org/portal/content/acl-code-ethics). If your work raises any ethical issues, you should include an explicit discussion of those issues. This will also be taken into account in the review process. You may find the following checklist of use: https://aclrollingreview.org/responsibleNLPresearch/
Authors are strongly encouraged to ensure that their work is reproducible; see, e.g., the following reproducibility checklist (https://2021.aclweb.org/calls/reproducibility-checklist/). Papers involving any kind of experimental results (human judgments, system outputs, etc) should incorporate a data availability statement into their paper. Authors are asked to indicate whether the data is made publicly available. If the data is not made available, authors should provide a brief explanation why. (E.g. because the data contains proprietary information.) A statement guide is available on the INLG 2024 website: https://inlg2024.github.io/
To submit a long or short paper to INLG 2024, authors can either submit directly or commit a paper previously reviewed by ARR via the same paper submission site (https://softconf.com/n/inlg2024/). For direct submissions, the deadline for submitting papers is May 31, 2024, 11:59:59 AOE. If committing an ARR paper to INLG, the submission is also made through the INLG 2024 paper submission site, indicating the link of the paper on OpenReview. The deadline for committing an ARR paper to INLG is June 24, 2024, 11:59:59 AOE, and the last eligible ARR paper submission deadline for INLG 2024 is May 24, 2024. It is important to note that when committing an ARR paper to INLG, it should be submitted through the INLG 2024 paper submission site, just like a direct submission paper, with the only difference being the need to provide the OpenReview link to the paper and to provide an optional author response to reviews.
Demo papers should be submitted directly through the INLG 2024 paper submission site (https://softconf.com/n/inlg2024/) by June 24, 2024, 11:59:59 AOE.
All accepted papers will be published in the INLG 2024 proceedings and included in the ACL anthology. A paper accepted for presentation at INLG 2024 must not have been presented at any other meeting with publicly available proceedings. Dual submission to other conferences is permitted, provided that authors clearly indicate this in the submission form. If the paper is accepted at both venues, the authors will need to choose which venue to present at, since they can not present the same paper twice.
Finally, at least one of the authors of an accepted paper must register to attend the conference.
**Awards**
INLG 2024 will present several awards to recognize outstanding achievements in the field. These awards are:
• Best Long Paper Award: This award will be given to the best long paper submission based on its originality, impact, and contribution to the field of NLG.
• Best Short Paper Award: This award will be given to the best short paper submission based on its originality, impact, and contribution to the field of NLG.
• Best Demo Paper Award: This award will recognize the best demo paper submitted to the conference. This award considers not only the paper's quality but also the demonstration given at the conference. The demonstration will play a significant role in the judging process.
• Best Evaluation Award: The award is a new addition to INLG 2024. This award is designed to honor authors who have demonstrated the most comprehensive and insightful analysis in evaluating their results. This award aims to highlight papers where the authors have gone the extra mile in providing a thorough and detailed analysis of their results, offering a nuanced understanding of their findings.
Dear colleagues,
We are happy to announce that the journal *Research in Corpus Linguistics,*
sponsored by the *Spanish Association for Corpus Linguistics**, has been
indexed in Scimago Journal and Country Rank. The journal has been ranked in
Quartile 2 (Q2) for the period 2019–2023.*
As SJR’s indexing criteria show, there is no doubt that RiCL has been an
academically relevant linguistic journal since 2019.
The editorial team is particularly happy with the coverage (2019–2023),
which is beneficial for authors who have published in RiCL over the
time-frame (2019–2023), and evidence of the substantial work carried out by
the team since 2018.
We would like to thank all contributors, guest editors and reviewers for
their collaboration with the journal and invite scholars to submit their
submission proposals to the journal.
Specific areas of interest include corpus design, compilation, and
typology; discourse, literary analysis and corpora; corpus-based
grammatical studies; corpus-based lexicology and lexicography; corpora,
contrastive studies and translation; corpus and linguistic variation;
corpus-based computational linguistics; corpora, language acquisition and
teaching; and special uses of corpus linguistics.
Further information at: *https://ricl.aelinco.es
<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://ricl.aelinco.es/__;!!D9dNQwwGXtA!XdCA4T…>*
All the best,
Paula Rodríguez-Puente and Carlos Prado-Alonso (editors of RiCL)
--
Paula Rodríguez Puente
rodriguezppaula(a)uniovi.es <paula.r.puente(a)gmail.com>
http://www.usc-vlcg.es/PRP.htm
<http://www.avg.com/email-signature?utm_medium=email&utm_source=link&utm_cam…>
Libre
de virus.www.avg.com
<http://www.avg.com/email-signature?utm_medium=email&utm_source=link&utm_cam…>
<#DAB4FAD8-2DD7-40BB-A1B8-4E2AA1F9FDF2>
***Apologies for possible cross-posting ***
Third Call for Papers:
5th International Workshop on Computational Approaches to Historical
Language Change (LChange’24)
/!\ Less than 3 weeks before the submission deadline /!\
We're organizing a full-day workshop co-located with the ACL conference on
Aug 15, 2024 in Bangkok and online. We hope to make this fifth edition
another resounding success!
This year, we are happy to host a *shared task* within LChange: the
*AXOLOTL-24* Shared Task on Explainable Semantic Change Modeling.
Workshop: https://www.changeiskey.org/event/2024-acl-lchange/
Shared task: https://github.com/ltgoslo/axolotl24_shared_task/.
Contact email: lchange(a)changeiskey.org
Workshop description
The LChange workshop targets all aspects of computational modeling of
language change, historical as well as synchronic change. It is running in
its fifth iteration following successful workshops in 2019
<https://languagechange.org/events/2019-acl-lcworkshop/>, 2021
<https://languagechange.org/events/2021-acl-lcworkshop/>, 2022
<https://languagechange.org/events/2022-acl-lchange/>, and 2023
<https://languagechange.org/events/2023-emnlp-lchange/>, and will be
co-located with ACL 2024 in Bangkok (Thailand), as a hybrid event. The
workshop will take place on Thursday 15 August 2024.
The main topics of the workshop remain the same: all aspects around
computational approaches to language change with a focus on digital text
corpora. LChange explores state-of-the-art computational methodologies,
theories and digital text resources on exploring the time-varying nature of
human language.
The aim of this workshop is to provide pioneering researchers who work on
computational methods, evaluation, and large-scale modeling of language
change an outlet for disseminating research on topics concerning language
change. Besides these goals, this workshop will also support discussion on
evaluating computational methodologies for uncovering language change.
We’ll also be offering mentorship to students, to discuss their research
topic with a member of the field, regardless of whether they are submitting
a paper or not.
Important Dates
* May 10, 2024: Paper submission
* June 20, 2024: Notification of acceptance
* June 30, 2024: Camera-ready papers due
* August 15, 2024: Workshop date
AXOLOTL-24 Shared Task
AXOLOTL-24 stands for “Ascertain and eXplain Overhauls of the Lexicon Over
Time at LChange'24” and is organized by Mariia Fedorova and Andrey Kutuzov
(University of Oslo), Timothee Mickus, Niko Partanen and Janine Siewert
(University of Helsinki), and Elena Spaziani (Sapienza University Rome).
The AXOLOTL'24 shared task itself is finished, and the leaderboards are
published. But you can still participate in the post-evaluation phase and
submit a paper to LChange. The shared task presents two subtasks:
-
Subtask 1: https://codalab.lisn.upsaclay.fr/competitions/18570 Finding
the target word usages associated with new, gained senses
-
Subtask 2: https://codalab.lisn.upsaclay.fr/competitions/18572
<https://codalab.lisn.upsaclay.fr/competitions/18008>Describing these
senses in a way that facilitates understanding and lexicographical research.
Submissions
We accept two types of submissions, long and short papers, consisting of up
to eight (8) and four (4) pages of content, respectively, plus unlimited
references; final versions will be given one additional page of content so
that reviewers' comments can be taken into account.
We also welcome papers focusing on releasing a dataset or a model; these
papers fall into the short paper category.
We invite original research papers from a wide range of topics, including
but not limited to:
-
Novel methods for detecting diachronic semantic change and lexical
replacement
-
Automatic discovery and quantitative evaluation of laws of language
change
-
Computational theories and generative models of language change
-
Sense-aware (semantic) change analysis
-
Diachronic word sense disambiguation
-
Novel methods for diachronic analysis of low-resource languages
-
Novel methods for diachronic linguistic data visualization
-
Novel applications and implications of language change detection
-
Quantification of sociocultural influences on language change
-
Cross-linguistic, phylogenetic, and developmental approaches to language
change
-
Novel datasets for cross-linguistic and diachronic analyses of language
Accepted papers will be presented orally or as posters and included in the
workshop proceedings. Submissions are open to all and are to be submitted
anonymously. All papers will be refereed through a double-blind peer review
process by at least three reviewers with final acceptance decisions made by
the workshop organizers. If you have published in the field previously, and
are interested in helping out in the program committee to review papers,
please send us an email!
Workshop organizers
Nina Tahmasebi, University of Gothenburg
Syrielle Montariol, École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne
Andrey Kutuzov, University of Oslo
Simon Hengchen, iguanodon.ai and Université de Genève
David Alfter, University of Gothenburg
Francesco Periti, University of Milan
Pierluigi Cassotti, University of Gothenburg
1st CALL FOR PARTICIPATION
We are pleased to announce the GermEval Shared Task GerMS-Detect on Sexism Detection in German Online News Fora collocated with Konvens 2024.
Competition Website: https://ofai.github.io/GermEval2024-GerMS/
Important Dates:
Trial phase: April 20 - April 29, 2024
Development phase: May 1 - June 5, 2024
Competition phase: June 7 - June 25, 2024
Paper submission due: July 1, 2024
Camera ready due: July 20, 2024
Shared Task @KONVENS: 10 September, 2024
Task description:
This shared task is about the detection of sexism/misogyny in comments posted in (mostly) German language to the comment section of an Austrian online newspaper. The data was originally collected for the development of a classifier that supports human moderators in detecting potentially sexist comments or identify comment fora with a high rate of sexist comments. For details see the Competition Website (https://ofai.github.io/GermEval2024-GerMS/).
Organizers:
The task is organized by the Austrian Research Institute for Artificial Intelligence (OFAI) (www.ofai.at).
Organizing team:
Brigitte Krenn (brigitte.krenn (AT) ofai.at)
Johann Petrak (johann.petrak (AT) ofai.at)
Stephanie Gross (stephanie.gross (AT) ofai.at)
================[Apologies for any cross-posting]================
**Special issue of the journal Traitement Automatique des Langues (TAL)
Abusive Language Detection : Linguistic Resources, Methods and
Applications **
**Guest Editors**
Farah Benamara (IRIT-Toulouse University, IPAL Singapore), Delphine
Battistelli (MoDyCo, Paris Nanterre University) and Viviana Patti (Turin
University)
**Motivations**
Abusive language - or, in another very common terminology, hate speech -
and the propagation of harmful stereotypes have unfortunately become
commonplace occurrences on various social media platforms, partly due to
users’ freedom and anonymity and the lack of regulation provided by
these platforms. The sheer volume and often implicit nature of such
unwanted content make manual moderation of these user spaces a
formidable task. Various scientific communities interested in its at
least partial automation have taken up the problem over the past ten
years. In particular, Computational Social Science, Natural Language
Processing and Computational Linguistics have proposed numerous works to
create resources, datasets, and models aimed at automating the task of
abusive language detection (henceforth ALD). In fact, we see that ALD
has become a research theme in its own right in the field of Natural
Language Processing with an abundant literature.
Abusive language (umbrella term to refer to the various forms of harmful
language, such as toxic, offensive language, hate speech, and
stereotypes) is topically focused and each specific manifestation of
abusive language targets different vulnerable groups based on
characteristics such as gender (misogyny, sexism), ethnicity, race,
religion (xenophobia, racism, Islamophobia), sexual orientation
(homophobia), and so on. Most automatic ALD approaches cast the problem
into a binary classification task but important considerations should be
taken into account, in particular: (1) the topical focus or the
target-oriented nature of hate speech ; (2) the degree of engagement of
users in abusive content (e.g., denunciation, approbation, reporting,
neutral attitude) ; (3) the question of stereotypes and dominant
ideologies ; (4) the question of linguistic strategies more particularly
linked or born with social networks (e.g., emoticons, hashtags).
Furthermore, most of the work (resources, classifiers) is developed for
English.
**Topics**
Motivated by the interest of the community in the problem of ALD, we
invite papers from Natural Language Processing, Machine Learning and
Computational Social Sciences. We explicitly encourage interdisciplinary
submissions (resources, computational methods, and user applications at
the interface of linguistics/psychology/socio-linguistics/sociology) but
also position papers on the actual state of the art in the field
discussing the limitations of the current approaches and directions for
future work. The topics covered by the special issue include, but are
not limited to:
-- Linguistic resources and evaluation: annotation schemes, corpus
linguistics studies, new datasets, with a particular interest in French
language and/or multilingual resources. In the case of strictly lexical
resources: methods for constituting them and coverage, semantic
categories retained.
-- Formal/Conceptual approaches for ALD as inspired by models in
sociology, socio-linguistics and psychology.
-- Models and Methods: supervised and unsupervised approaches, including
LLMs.
-- Role of contextual phenomena, including discourses, extra-linguistic
contexts (e.g., cultural aspects).
-- Models for cross-lingual and multimodal detection.
-- New approaches beyond binary classification: target-oriented ALD,
degrees of user engagement, etc.
-- Dynamics of online AL in social media, propaganda propagation.
-- Bias detection and removal in resource creation, datasets and methods.
-- Application of ALD tools in education, social media content
moderation, etc.
-- Social, legal, and ethical implications of detecting, monitoring and
moderating AL.
**Important dates**
May 31th, 2024: Submission deadline
July 15th, 2024: Notification of acceptance after first rereading
End of September 2024: Revised version
Mid October 2024: Final decision
End of November 2024: Camera ready
January 2025: Publication of the special issue
**Submission**
Submissions can either be in French or English and should follow the
journal templates: https://tal-65-3.sciencesconf.org/
**About the journal**
Traitement Automatiques des Langues Journal (TAL) is the international
French journal of Natural Language Processing
(https://www.atala.org/revuetal) published by ATALA (French Association
for Natural Language Processing, http://www.atala.org) since 1959 with
the support of CNRS (National Centre for Scientific Research). It is
indexed by ACL Anthology as well as DBLP. It is also supported by the
Institute of Human and Social Sciences of the CNRS.
**Contact**
For any question, please contact tal-65-3(a)sciencesconf.org
**External committee**
-- Cristina Bosco, University of Turin
-- Elena Cabrio, University of Côte d'Azur
-- Tommaso Caselli, Faculty of Arts, Rijksuniveristeit Groningen
-- Valentina Dragos, ONERA
-- Karën Fort, Sorbonne University
-- Claire Hugonnier, University of Grenoble Alpes
-- Irina Illina, University of Lorraine
-- Roy Ka-Wei Lee, Singapore University of Technology and Design
-- Véronique Moriceau, IRIT, University of Toulouse
-– Frédérique Segond, INRIA Paris
-- Mariona Taulé, University of Barcelona
-- Samuel Vernet, Aix-Marseille University
-- Mathieu Valette, Paris Sorbonne Nouvelle University
-- Marcos Zampieri, George Mason University
--
========================
Farah Benamara Zitoune
Professor in Computer Science, Université Paul Sabatier
IRIT-CNRS
118 Route de Narbonne, 31062, Toulouse.
Tel : +33 5 61 55 77 06
http://www.irit.fr/~Farah.Benamara
==================================
--
========================
Farah Benamara Zitoune
Professor in Computer Science, Université Paul Sabatier
IRIT-CNRS
118 Route de Narbonne, 31062, Toulouse.
Tel : +33 5 61 55 77 06
http://www.irit.fr/~Farah.Benamara
==================================
Final Call For Papers - SIGIR eCom'24 - https://sigir-ecom.github.io/
The SIGIR Workshop on eCommerce will serve as a platform for publication
and discussion of Information Retrieval, NLP and Vision research relative
to their applications in the domain of eCommerce. This workshop will bring
together practitioners and researchers from academia and industry to
discuss the challenges and approaches to product search and recommendation
in eCommerce. The deadline for paper submission is May 3rd, 2024 (11:59
P.M. AoE)
The special theme of this year's workshop is eCommerce Search in the Age of
Generative AI and LLMs.
The workshop will also include a data challenge. This year we will
collaborate with TREC on a product search data challenge (
https://trec-product-search.github.io/index.html). The overarching goal is
to study how end-to-end retrieval systems can be built and evaluated given
a large set of products. The data challenge provides a corpus of products
and a set of user intents (queries): the goal is to find the product that
suits the user’s needs.
SIGIR eCom is a full day workshop taking place on Thursday, July 18, 2024
in conjunction with SIGIR 2024. SIGIR eCom'24 will be an in-person workshop.
________________
Important Dates:
Paper submission deadline - May 3rd, 2024 (11:59 P.M. AoE)
Notification of acceptance - May 23, 2024
Camera Ready Version of Papers Due - June 24, 2024
SIGIR eCom Full day Workshop - July 18, 2024
We invite quality research contributions, position and opinion papers
addressing relevant challenges in the domain of eCommerce. We invite
submission of both papers and posters. All submitted papers and posters
will be single-blind and will be peer reviewed by an international program
committee of researchers of high repute. Accepted submissions will be
presented at the workshop.
Topics:
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
* eCommerce search in the age of Generative AI and LLMs (2024 special theme)
- Ranking and Whole Page Relevance
- Optimization for IR and business metrics
- Diversity in product search and recommendations
- Relevance models for multi-faceted entities
- Relevance vs. revenue
- Deterministic sorts (e.g. price low to high)
- Temporal dynamics and seasonality
* Query and Document Understanding
- Query intent, query suggestions, and auto-completion
- Strategies for resolving low or zero recall queries
- Converting across modalities (e.g., text, structured data, images)
- Categorization and facets
- Reviews and sentiment analysis
* Recommendation and Personalization
- Personalization & contextualization, including the use of personal
facets such as age, gender, location
- Privacy, bias and ethics in eCommerce IR
- Blending recommendations and search results
- Representations and Data
- Semantic representation of products, queries, and customers
- Construction and use of knowledge graphs for eCommerce
* IR Fundamentals for eCommerce
- Unified and universal search and recommendations
- Cross-lingual search and machine translation
- Indexing and search in rapidly changing environments (e.g., auction
sites)
- Experimentation techniques including AB testing and multi-armed bandits
* Visual Search in ecommerce
- Large-scale Visual Search Challenges and Solutions
- Multimodal Search and combining visual and textual information
- Combining Vision and language models
- Explainable AI for Visual Search
* Other challenges
- Trust, transparency, and fairness in eCommerce
- UX for eCommerce
- The role of search in trust and security for marketplaces
- Question answering and chatbots for eCommerce
Data/Resource Track:
In order to promote academic research in the eCommerce domain, we plan to
accept a small number of high quality dataset contributions. These
submissions should be accompanied by a clear and detailed description of
the dataset, some potential questions and applications that arise from it.
Preliminary empirical investigations conveying any insight about the data
will increase the quality of the submission.
Submission Instructions:
All papers will be peer reviewed (single-blind) by the program committee
and judged by their relevance to the workshop, especially to the main
themes identified above, and their potential to generate discussion.
Submissions must describe work that is not previously published, not
accepted for publication elsewhere, and not currently under review
elsewhere. All submissions must be in English. The workshop follows a
single-blind reviewing process, i.e. author names must be on the papers. We
do not accept anonymized submissions. At least one of the authors of each
accepted paper must register for the workshop and present the paper.
All submissions must be in PDF formatted according to the latest CEUR
single column format; the short (8-page) and long (15-page) limits are
extended to account for this. For instructions and LaTeX/Overleaf/docx
templates, see: https://ceur-ws.org/HOWTOSUBMIT.html#CEURART Read up to and
including the “License footnote in paper PDFs” section. Please Use
Emphasizing Capitalized Style for Paper Titles. Submit your paper PDF
through the SIGIR eCom’24 Easychair:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=sigirecom24
Long paper limit: 15 pages. References are not counted in the page limit.
Short paper limit: 8 pages. References are not counted in the page limit.
The deadline for paper submission is May 3rd, 2024 (11:59 P.M. AoE)
https://sigir-ecom.github.io/
Dear Colleagues,
We are pleased to inform you that we will be hosting the "Shared Task:
Low-Resource Indic Language Translation" again this year as part of WMT
2024. Following the outstanding success and enthusiastic participation
witnessed in the previous year's edition, we are excited to continue this
important initiative. Despite recent advancements in machine translation
(MT), such as multilingual translation and transfer learning techniques,
the scarcity of parallel data remains a significant challenge, particularly
for low-resource languages.
The WMT 2024 Indic Machine Translation Shared Task aims to address this
challenge by focusing on low-resource Indic languages from diverse language
families. Specifically, we are targeting languages such as Assamese, Mizo,
Khasi, Manipuri, Nyishi, Bodo, Mising, and Kokborok.
For inquiries and further information, please contact us at
lrilt.wmt24(a)gmail.com. Additionally, you can find more details and updates
on the task through the following link: Task Link:
https://www2.statmt.org/wmt24/indic-mt-task.html.
We highly encourage participants to register in advance so that we can
provide updates regarding release dates of data and other relevant
information periodically
To register for the event, please fill out the registration form available
here. (
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSd8LwriqdLLhVNAvUWEcGRJmKuBFQZ9BR_…
)
We look forward to your participation and contributions to advancing
low-resource Indic language translation.
with best regards,
Santanu