Apologies for cross-postings
==============
Last Call for Papers
1st Joint SLTU (Spoken Language Technologies for Under-resourced
languages) and CCURL (Collaboration and Computing for Under-Resourced
Languages) Workshop
SLTU-CCURL 2020 is endorsed by SIGUL, ELRA and ISCA.
Date: 11-12 May 2020
Venue: Palais du Pharo, Marseille, France
Website: http://sltu-ccurl-2020.ilc.cnr.it
Submission Deadline: 14 February 2020 - no extension will be granted
Submission page: https://www.softconf.com/lrec2020/SLTUCCURL2020/
==============
Workshop Description and Objectives
The first joint SLTU-CCURL workshop, organized by SIGUL, a joint Special
Interest Group of the European Language Resources Association (ELRA) and
of the International Speech Communication Association (ISCA), will
gather researchers working on speech processing and NLP for
less-resourced languages.
We solicit papers and posters related to all areas of NLP , speech and
computational linguistics, as well as those at the intersection with
digital humanities and documentary linguistics, provided that they
address less-resourced languages.
The intention of this joint SLTU-CCURL workshop is not only to provide a
forum for the presentation of research, but also to offer a venue where
researchers in different disciplines and from varied backgrounds can
fruitfully explore new areas of intellectual and practical development
while honoring their common interest of sustaining less-resourced
languages.
Topics of interest
Topics include but are not limited to:
-Language resource development, acquisition and representation
-Linguistic theories, corpus development and resources
-Linguistic and cognitive studies
-Unsupervised discovery of linguistic units
-Code switched lexical modeling
-Multi-lingual and cross-lingual (spoken, text) language processing
-Speech-to-text, text-to-speech and speech-to-speech processing
-Machine translation and dialogue systems
-NLP and speech technologies for under-resourced languages
Submission & Publication
Papers need to address less-resourced languages. They can contain an
analysis and insight into existing methods and problems; a description
of resources; an overview of the literature or of current initiatives,
or a combination of the above. Authors must declare if part of the paper
contains material previously published elsewhere.
We accept submission of long papers (up to 8 pages, to be presented as
long presentations) and short papers (up to 4 pages, to be presented as
posters or demos). The program committee reserves the right to decide
whether a paper submitted as a long paper is better suited for a poster
presentation. Page limits exclude references.
The papers of the workshop will be published in online proceedings.
Papers must strictly comply with the LREC stylesheet
(https://lrec2020.lrec-conf.org/en/submission2020/authors-kit/) and be
submitted in PDF unprotected format.
Submission page: https://www.softconf.com/lrec2020/SLTUCCURL2020/
Each submission will be reviewed by three programme committee members.
In compliance with the LREC rules, papers must not be anonymized.
Important Dates
- Paper submission deadline: 14 February 2020
- Notification of acceptance: 13 March 2020
- Camera-ready paper: 2 April 2020
- Workshop date: 11-12 May 2020
Invited speakers
Alan Black, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Teresa Lynn, ADAPT Centre, Dublin City University, Ireland
Tutorials
On May 10th, SLTU-CCURL is pleased to offer two tutorials (held at
Université Aix-Marseille, near the LREC venue).
T1: Jan Trmal, John Hopkins University: Building ASR systems using the
Kaldi toolkit
T2: Achim Rabus, University of Freiburg : Introduction to Handwritten
Text Recognition with Transkribus
More details will be announced on the workshop web page.
Attendance to tutorials will be free of charge but registration will be
required for organisational purposes (and number of attendees will be
limited to 25 per tutorial).
Organizing Committee
* Dorothee Beermann, NTNU, Norway
* Laurent Besacier, LIG-Univ. Grenoble Alpes, France
* Sakriani Sakti, NAIST, Japan
* Claudia Soria, CNR-ILC, Italy
To contact the organizers, please mail Claudia.soria(a)ilc.cnr.it or
Laurent.Besacier(a)univ-grenoble-alpes.fr (Subject: [SLTUCCURL@LREC2020]).
Programme Committee
Adrian Doyle (University of Galway, Ireland)
Alexey Karpov (SPIIRAS, Russian Federation)
Alexis Palmer (University of North Texas, USA)
Amita Dev (IGDTUW, India)
Amir Aharoni (Wikimedia Foundation)
Andras Kornai (Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary)
Angelo Mario Del Grosso (CNR-ILC, Italy)
Antti Arppe (University of Alberta, Canada)
Anupam Shukla (IIITM, India)
Charl Van Heerden (Saigen, South Africa)
Daan Van Esch (Google)
Dafydd Gibbon (Bielefeld University, Germany)
Delyth Prys (Bangor University, UK)
Dewi Bryn Jones (Bangor University, UK)
Dorothee Beermann (NTNU, Norway)
Emily Le Chen (University of Illinois, USA)
Federico Boschetti (CNR-ILC, Italy)
Francis Tyers (Moscow Higher School of Economics, Russia)
Gerard Bailly (GIPSA Lab, CNRS)
Gilles Adda (LIMSI/IMMI CNRS, France)
Hemant Patil (DA-IICT, India)
Jeff Good (University at Buffalo, USA)
John Judge (ADAPT DCU, Ireland)
Jonas Fromseier Mortensen (Google)
Jordan Lachler (University of Alberta, Canada)
Joseph Mariani (LIMSI-CNRS, France)
Kepa Sarasola (University of the Basque Country, Spain)
Kevin Scannell (Saint Louis University, Missouri, USA)
Klara Ceberio (Elhuyar, Spain)
Lane Schwartz (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA)
Laurent Besacier (LIG-IMAG, France)
Maite Melero (Barcelona Supercomputing Center, Spain)
Miikka Silfverberg (University of Helsinki, Finland)
Mikel Forcada (Universitat d’Alacant, Spain)
Mohammad A. M. Abushariah (The University of Jordan, Jordan)
Nick Thieberger (University of Melbourne / ARC Centre of Excellence for
the Dynamics of Language, Australia)
Omar Farooq (AMU, India)
Pierric Sans (Google)
Pradip K Das (IIT, India)
Sakriani Sakti (NAIST, Japan)
Satoshi Nakamura (NAIST, Japan)
Sebastian Stüker (KIT, Germany)
Shyam S Agrawal (KIIT, India)
Steven Bird (Charles Darwin University, Australia)
Tanja Schultz (Uni-Bremen, Germany)
Thang Vu (Uni-Stuttgart, Germany)
Teresa Lynn (ADAPT Centre, Ireland)
Trond Trosterud (Tromsø University, Norway)
Tunde Adegbola (African Languages Technology Initiative, Nigeria)
Vera Ferreira (CIDLeS - Interdisciplinary Centre for Social and Language
Documentation, Portugal)
Win Pa Pa (UCS Yangon, Myanmar)
Acknowledgments
The 1st joint SLTU-CCURL Workshop is endorsed by SIGUL
(http://www.elra.info/en/sig/sigul/), ISCA
(https://www.isca-speech.org/iscaweb/), and SIGEL and sponsored by Google.
Identify, Describe and Share your LRs!
Describing your LRs in the LRE Map is now a normal practice in the
submission procedure of LREC (introduced in 2010 and adopted by other
conferences). To continue the efforts initiated at LREC 2014 about
“Sharing LRs” (data, tools, web-services, etc.), authors will have the
possibility, when submitting a paper, to upload LRs in a special LREC
repository. This effort of sharing LRs, linked to the LRE Map for their
description, may become a new “regular” feature for conferences in our
field. This will contribute to creating a common repository where
everyone can deposit and share data.
As scientific work requires accurate citations of referenced work so as
to allow the community to understand the whole context and also to allow
the replication of the experiments conducted by other researchers, LREC
2020 endorses the need to uniquely Identify LRs through the use of the
International Standard Language Resource Number (ISLRN, www.islrn.org),
a Persistent Unique Identifier to be assigned to each Language Resource.
The assignment of ISLRNs to LRs cited in LREC papers will be offered at
submission time.
--
Claudia Soria
Researcher
Istituto di Linguistica Computazionale "A. Zampolli"
Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche
Via Moruzzi 1
56124 Pisa
Italy
Tel. +39 050 3153166
Skype clausor
*CFP Deadline Extended to February 24, 2020*
2nd Call For Papers:
The Linguistic Data Consortium (LDC) will host the workshop "Citizen Linguistics in Language Resource Development" (CLLRD 2020) at LREC 2020 in Marseille, France, on May 16, 2020.
Full details and CFP: https://sites.google.com/view/cllrd-2020/
Description
Notwithstanding advances in data collection and processing, language related research, education and technology development continue to suffer from inadequate supply of Language Resources. To supplement traditional LR development, which typically relies upon top down support from some government or private foundation, Citizen Linguistics (the Citizen Science of Language) changes the incentive model to attract a new workforce which in turn requires a different kind of workflow. Incentives to Citizen Linguists may include the opportunities to learn and develop new skills; to socialize, compete and earn status or recognition; to document their language and promote their culture and, most importantly, to contribute directly to research and indirectly to a greater cause or social good. By offering human contributors sustained access to appropriate opportunities, activities, and incentives, we can enhance LR development well beyond what traditional direct funding alone can produce. However, along with these new incentives and workflows come new challenges whose solutions are relevant even to expert (paid) annotation.
The goal of this hybrid workshop/tutorial is two-fold. First is to provide a forum for researchers and practitioners to explore and discuss the issues, advantages and challenges of using Citizen Linguistics as a method for the creation of language resources. Second is to introduce LanguageARC<https://www.google.com/url?q=https%3A%2F%2Flanguagearc.com&sa=D&sntz=1&usg=…>, a new Citizen Linguistics web portal for collecting language data and judgements.
Topics
There will be two sessions at the workshop. For the first session, papers are welcome on any topic related to Citizen Linguistics in the development of Language Resources including:
· case studies
· language specific challenges
· incentive models
· workforce recruitment, training and evaluation
· task design, granularity and assignment
· workflow and ordering
· response evaluation and aggregation
· the preparation of language resources from raw results and their use in research and in developing and evaluating HLTs.
For the second session, papers are welcome on any topic related specifically to the use of LanguageARC.org<http://LanguageARC.org> to create tasks that collect language data for research and development. Presenting authors of Best Papers Employing LanguageARC will receive travel subsidies to present during this workshop at LREC. The second session will also include a brief tutorial on LanguageARC for new or potential users. By the end of the tutorial, attendees will be fully capable of implementing their data collection or annotation project via LanguageARC.
Submissions
We will accept papers between 4 and 8 pages excluding references. Accepted workshop papers will be published as workshop proceedings along with the main conference papers. Papers must follow the LREC 2020 style sheet<https://www.google.com/url?q=https%3A%2F%2Flrec2020.lrec-conf.org%2Fen%2Fsu…> and author’s kit<https://www.google.com/url?q=https%3A%2F%2Flrec2020.lrec-conf.org%2Fen%2Fsu…> templates. Papers are to be submitted via the workshop START page<https://www.google.com/url?q=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.softconf.com%2Flrec2020%2FCL…>.
Important Dates
- submission deadline: February 24, 2020
- notification of acceptance: March 12, 2020
- deadline for camera-ready versions: April 2, 2020
Identify, Describe and Share your LRs!
* Describing your LRs in the LRE Map is now a normal practice in the submission procedure of LREC (introduced in 2010 and adopted by other conferences). To continue the efforts initiated at LREC 2014 about “Sharing LRs” (data, tools, web-services, etc.), authors will have the possibility, when submitting a paper, to upload LRs in a special LREC repository. This effort of sharing LRs, linked to the LRE Map for their description, may become a new “regular” feature for conferences in our field, thus contributing to creating a common repository where everyone can deposit and share data.
* As scientific work requires accurate citations of referenced work so as to allow the community to understand the whole context and also replicate the experiments conducted by other researchers, LREC 2020 endorses the need to uniquely Identify LRs through the use of the International Standard Language Resource Number (ISLRN, www.islrn.org<http://www.google.com/url?q=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.islrn.org%2F&sa=D&sntz=1&usg=A…>), a Persistent Unique Identifier to be assigned to each Language Resource. The assignment of ISLRNs to LRs cited in LREC papers will be offered at submission time.
For more information please visit the workshop website (https://sites.google.com/view/cllrd-2020/) or contact James Fiumara: jfiumara AT ldc.upenn.edu<http://ldc.upenn.edu>
The organizing committee,
Chris Callison-Burch, University of Pennsylvania
Christopher Cieri, Linguistic Data Consortium, University of Pennsylvania
James Fiumara, Linguistic Data Consortium, University of Pennsylvania
Mark Liberman, Linguistic Data Consortium, University of Pennsylvania
Chris
—
Christopher Cieri
Executive Director, Linguistic Data Consortium and Adjunct Associate Professor of Linguistics
University of Pennsylvania
3600 Market Street, Philadelphia, PA. 19104
p: 215-573-5489, f: 215-573-2175, mailto:ccieri@ldc.upenn.edu
*********************************************************
SPECOM-2020 FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS
*********************************************************
22nd International Conference on Speech and Computer (SPECOM-2020)
Venue: St. Petersburg, Russia, October 06-10, 2020
Web: http://www.specom.nw.ru/2020
ORGANIZERS
The conference is organized by the St. Petersburg Institute for
Informatics and Automation of the Russian Academy of Sciences (SPIIRAS,
St. Petersburg, Russia) in cooperation with Moscow State Linguistic
University (MSLU, Moscow, Russia).
CONFERENCE TOPICS
SPECOM attracts researchers, linguists and engineers working in the
following areas of speech science, speech technology, natural language
processing, human-computer interaction:
Affective computing
Audio-visual speech processing
Corpus linguistics
Computational paralinguistics
Deep learning for audio processing
Feature extraction
Forensic speech investigations
Human-machine interaction
Language identification
Multichannel signal processing
Multimedia processing
Multimodal analysis and synthesis
Sign language processing
Speaker recognition
Speech and language resources
Speech analytics and audio mining
Speech and voice disorders
Speech-based applications
Speech driving systems in robotics
Speech enhancement
Speech perception
Speech recognition and understanding
Speech synthesis
Speech translation systems
Spoken dialogue systems
Spoken language processing
Text mining and sentiment analysis
Virtual and augmented reality
Voice assistants
SATELLITE EVENT
5th International Conference on Interactive Collaborative Robotics
ICR-2020: http://www.specom.nw.ru/icr2020
OFFICIAL LANGUAGE
The official language of the event is English. However, papers on
processing of languages other than English are strongly encouraged.
FORMAT OF THE CONFERENCE
The conference program will include presentation of invited talks, oral
presentations, and poster/demonstration sessions.
SUBMISSION OF PAPERS
Authors are invited to submit full papers of 6-10 pages formatted in the
Springer LNCS style. Each paper will be reviewed by at least three
independent reviewers (single-blind), and accepted papers will be
presented either orally or as posters. Papers submitted to SPECOM must
not be under review by any other conference or publication during the
SPECOM review cycle, and must not be previously published or accepted
for publication elsewhere. The authors are asked to submit their papers
using the on-line submission system:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=specom2020
PROCEEDINGS
SPECOM Proceedings will be published by Springer as a book in the
Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence (LNAI/LNCS) series listed in
all major international citation databases. SPECOM Proceedings are
included in the list of forthcoming proceedings for October 2020.
IMPORTANT DATES
May 26, 2020 ............ Submission of full papers
July 03, 2020 ........... Notification of acceptance
July 17, 2020 .......... Camera-ready papers and early registration
October 06-10, 2020 ..... Conference dates
GENERAL CHAIRS
Alexey Karpov - SPIIRAS, Russia
Rodmonga Potapova - MSLU, Russia
CONTACTS
All correspondence regarding the conference should be addressed to:
SPECOM-2020 Secretariat:
E-mails: specom(a)iias.spb.su
SPECOM-2020 web-site: www.specom.nw.ru/2020
--
Claudia Soria
Researcher
Istituto di Linguistica Computazionale "A. Zampolli"
Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche
Via Moruzzi 1
56124 Pisa
Italy
Tel. +39 050 3153166
Skype clausor
> Début du message réexpédié :
>
> De: zerospeech 2020 <zerospeech2020(a)gmail.com <mailto:zerospeech2020@gmail.com>>
> Objet: ZeroSpeech 2020 - release of the evaluation code and submission protocol
> Date: 7 février 2020 à 22:21:48 UTC+1
>
>
> Dear all,
>
> We have updated our website <http://zerospeech.com/2020/index.html> with the evaluation code and submission protocol for the ZeroResource Speech Challenge 2020. Please see both the overview page and the detailed instructions, which include new submission formats and software tools.
>
> Please also download the updated versions of the datasets, even if you have downloaded them already. As indicated, the training data is the same, but new test files have been added submission. You will need to register as challenge participants to get a password.
>
> Thanks very much for your continuing interest,
>
> Best regards,
>
> The ZRC Team
> --
> http://zerospeech.com/ <http://zerospeech.com/>
Apologies for cross-postings
==============
2nd Call for Papers
1st Joint SLTU (Spoken Language Technologies for Under-resourced languages) and CCURL (Collaboration and Computing for Under-Resourced Languages) Workshop
Date: 11-12 May 2020
Venue: Palais du Pharo, Marseille, France
Website: http://sltu-ccurl-2020.ilc.cnr.it <http://sltu-ccurl-2020.ilc.cnr.it/>
Submission Deadline: 14 February 2020
Submission page: https://www.softconf.com/lrec2020/SLTUCCURL2020/
==============
Workshop Description and Objectives
The first joint SLTU-CCURL workshop, organized by SIGUL, a joint Special Interest Group of the European Language Resources Association (ELRA) and of the International Speech Communication Association (ISCA), will gather researchers working on speech processing and NLP for less-resourced languages.
We solicit papers and posters related to all areas of NLP , speech and computational linguistics, as well as those at the intersection with digital humanities and documentary linguistics, provided that they address less-resourced languages.
The intention of this joint SLTU-CCURL workshop is not only to provide a forum for the presentation of research, but also to offer a venue where researchers in different disciplines and from varied backgrounds can fruitfully explore new areas of intellectual and practical development while honoring their common interest of sustaining less-resourced languages.
Topics of interest
Topics include but are not limited to:
-Language resource development, acquisition and representation
-Linguistic theories, corpus development and resources
-Linguistic and cognitive studies
-Unsupervised discovery of linguistic units
-Code switched lexical modeling
-Multi-lingual and cross-lingual (spoken, text) language processing
-Speech-to-text, text-to-speech and speech-to-speech processing
-Machine translation and dialogue systems
-NLP and speech technologies for under-resourced languages
Submission & Publication
Papers need to address less-resourced languages. They can contain an analysis and insight into existing methods and problems; a description of resources; an overview of the literature or of current initiatives, or a combination of the above. Authors must declare if part of the paper contains material previously published elsewhere.
We accept submission of long papers (up to 8 pages, to be presented as long presentations) and short papers (up to 4 pages, to be presented as posters or demos). The program committee reserves the right to decide whether a paper submitted as a long paper is better suited for a poster presentation. Page limits exclude references.
The papers of the workshop will be published in online proceedings.
Papers must strictly comply with the LREC stylesheet (https://lrec2020.lrec-conf.org/en/submission2020/authors-kit/) and be submitted in PDF unprotected format.
Submission page: https://www.softconf.com/lrec2020/SLTUCCURL2020/
Each submission will be reviewed by three programme committee members. In compliance with the LREC rules, papers must not be anonymized.
Important Dates
- Paper submission deadline: 14 February 2020
- Notification of acceptance: 13 March 2020
- Camera-ready paper: 2 April 2020
- Workshop date: 11-12 May 2020
Invited speakers
Alan Black, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Teresa Lynn, ADAPT Centre, Dublin City University, Ireland
Tutorials
On May 10th, SLTU-CCURL is pleased to offer two tutorials (held at Université Aix-Marseille, near the LREC venue).
T1: Jan Trmal & Sanjeev Khudanpur, John Hopkins University: Building ASR systems using the Kaldi toolkit
T2: Achim Rabus, University of Freiburg : Introduction to Handwritten Text Recognition with Transkribus
More details will be announced on the workshop web page.
Attendance to tutorials will be free of charge but registration will be required for organisational purposes (and number of attendees will be limited to 25 per tutorial).
Organizing Committee
Dorothee Beermann, NTNU, Norway
Laurent Besacier, LIG-Univ. Grenoble Alpes, France
Sakriani Sakti, NAIST, Japan
Claudia Soria, CNR-ILC, Italy
To contact the organizers, please mail Claudia.soria(a)ilc.cnr.it or Laurent.Besacier(a)univ-grenoble-alpes.fr (Subject: [SLTUCCURL@LREC2020]).
Programme Committee
Adrian Doyle (University of Galway, Ireland)
Alexey Karpov (SPIIRAS, Russian Federation)
Alexis Palmer (University of North Texas, USA)
Amita Dev (IGDTUW, India)
Amir Aharoni (Wikimedia Foundation)
Andras Kornai (Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary)
Angelo Mario Del Grosso (CNR-ILC, Italy)
Antti Arppe (University of Alberta, Canada)
Anupam Shukla (IIITM, India)
Charl Van Heerden (Saigen, South Africa)
Daan Van Esch (Google)
Dafydd Gibbon (Bielefeld University, Germany)
Delyth Prys (Bangor University, UK)
Dewi Bryn Jones (Bangor University, UK)
Dorothee Beermann (NTNU, Norway)
Emily Le Chen (University of Illinois, USA)
Federico Boschetti (CNR-ILC, Italy)
Francis Tyers (Moscow Higher School of Economics, Russia)
Gerard Bailly (GIPSA Lab, CNRS)
Gilles Adda (LIMSI/IMMI CNRS, France)
Hemant Patil (DA-IICT, India)
Jeff Good (University at Buffalo, USA)
John Judge (ADAPT DCU, Ireland)
Jonas Fromseier Mortensen (Google)
Jordan Lachler (University of Alberta, Canada)
Joseph Mariani (LIMSI-CNRS, France)
Kepa Sarasola (University of the Basque Country, Spain)
Kevin Scannell (Saint Louis University, Missouri, USA)
Klara Ceberio (Elhuyar, Spain)
Lane Schwartz (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA)
Laurent Besacier (LIG-IMAG, France)
Maite Melero (Barcelona Supercomputing Center, Spain)
Miikka Silfverberg (University of Helsinki, Finland)
Mikel Forcada (Universitat d’Alacant, Spain)
Mohammad A. M. Abushariah (The University of Jordan, Jordan)
Nick Thieberger (University of Melbourne / ARC Centre of Excellence for the Dynamics of Language, Australia)
Omar Farooq (AMU, India)
Pierric Sans (Google)
Pradip K Das (IIT, India)
Sakriani Sakti (NAIST, Japan)
Satoshi Nakamura (NAIST, Japan)
Sebastian Stüker (KIT, Germany)
Shyam S Agrawal (KIIT, India)
Sin Horng Chen (NCTU, Taiwan)
Steven Bird (Charles Darwin University, Australia)
Tanja Schultz (Uni-Bremen, Germany)
Thang Vu (Uni-Stuttgart, Germany)
Teresa Lynn (ADAPT Centre, Ireland)
Trond Trosterud (Tromsø University, Norway)
Tunde Adegbola (African Languages Technology Initiative, Nigeria)
Vera Ferreira (CIDLeS - Interdisciplinary Centre for Social and Language Documentation, Portugal)
Win Pa Pa (UCS Yangon, Myanmar)
Acknowledgments
The 1st joint SLTU-CCURL Workshop is endorsed by SIGUL (http://www.elra.info/en/sig/sigul/), ISCA (https://www.isca-speech.org/iscaweb/), and SIGEL and sponsored by Google.
Identify, Describe and Share your LRs!
Describing your LRs in the LRE Map is now a normal practice in the submission procedure of LREC (introduced in 2010 and adopted by other conferences). To continue the efforts initiated at LREC 2014 about “Sharing LRs” (data, tools, web-services, etc.), authors will have the possibility, when submitting a paper, to upload LRs in a special LREC repository. This effort of sharing LRs, linked to the LRE Map for their description, may become a new “regular” feature for conferences in our field. This will contribute to creating a common repository where everyone can deposit and share data.
As scientific work requires accurate citations of referenced work so as to allow the community to understand the whole context and also to allow the replication of the experiments conducted by other researchers, LREC 2020 endorses the need to uniquely Identify LRs through the use of the International Standard Language Resource Number (ISLRN, www.islrn.org <http://www.islrn.org/>), a Persistent Unique Identifier to be assigned to each Language Resource. The assignment of ISLRNs to LRs cited in LREC papers will be offered at submission time.