Editor for this issue: James Yuells <james
linguistlist.org>
Technologies--Call for Participation CALL FOR PARTICIPATION NAACL-Supported Two-Week Summer School in Human Language Technologies The North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics (NAACL) is offering an exciting summer school opportunity for a limited number of graduate and undergraduate students interested in the field of Human Language Technology. The summer school will be held June 30-July 11 at The Center for Language and Speech Processing (CLSP) at Johns Hopkins University in conjunction with the pre-workshop classes of the CLSP 2003 Summer Workshop on Language Engineering. Five to ten students will be selected to attend two weeks of lectures and hands-on laboratories that will include general introductions to the major areas of study within the field of Human Language Technology (e.g. Natural Language Processing, Automatic Speech Recognition, Machine Translation, Information Retrieval) as well as sessions on specialized research topics of current interest in the field. In addition to providing summer school registration fees for all selected attendees, we also anticipate providing a limited number of scholarships to cover additional costs (in particular, travel expenses to the workshop venue and/or accommodation for the full duration). We hope to be able to cover the full cost of these two items for at least some students, and partial costs for others. If you are a graduate student, please ask your advisor to contribute to the funding. Preference for funding will be given to students attending North American institutions. Students are expected to attend both weeks of the summer school. APPLICATION INSTRUCTIONS are available at http://www.naacl.org/, which also has information on applying for SCHOLARSHIP funds. The application deadline is May 1, 2003. For questions about the summer school program, please contact one of the following NAACL Executive Board members: Owen Rambow (rambowMail to author|Respond to list|Read more issues|LINGUIST home page|Top of issuecs.columbia.edu) Claire Cardie (cardie
cs.cornell.edu) Diane Litman (litman
cs.upitt.edu) Dragomir Radev (radev
umich.edu)