LINGUIST List 18.2646
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Tue Sep 11 2007
FYI: CFP: JHU Summer Workshop on Language Engineering
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1. Jason
Eisner,
CFP: JHU Summer Workshop on Language Engineering
Message 1: CFP: JHU Summer Workshop on Language Engineering
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Date: 08-Sep-2007
From: Jason Eisner <jason cs.jhu.edu>
Subject: CFP: JHU Summer Workshop on Language Engineering
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Call for team research proposals Deadline: Wednesday, October 17, 2007 http://www.clsp.jhu.edu/ws2008/CFP The Center for Language and Speech Processing at Johns Hopkins University invites one-page research proposals for a Summer Workshop on Language Engineering, to be held in Baltimore, MD, USA, July 7 to August 14, 2008. Workshop proposals should be suitable for a six-week team exploration, and should aim to advance the state of the art in any of the various fields of Language Engineering including speech recognition, machine translation, information retrieval, text summarization and question answering. Research topics selected for investigation by teams in previous workshops may serve as good examples for your proposal. (See http://www.clsp.jhu.edu/workshops.) This year's workshop will be sponsored by NSF and supported in part by the newly established Human Language Technology Center of Excellence (CoE). All relevant topics of scientific interest are welcomed. Proposals can receive special priority if they contribute to one of the following long-term challenges: * Automatic Population Of A Knowledge Base From Text: Devise and develop technology to automatically populate a large knowledge base (KB) by accumulating entities, events, and relations from vast quantities of text from various formal and informal genres in multiple languages. Devise methods to do this effectively for resource rich and/or resource poor languages. The aim is to disambiguate and normalize entities, events, and relations in such a way that the KB could represent changes over time thus reflecting text sources. * Robust Technology For Speech: Technologies like speech-to-text, speaker identification, and language identification share a common weakness: accuracy degrades disproportionately with changes in input (microphone, genre, speaker, etc.). Seemingly small amounts of noise or diverse data sources cause machines to break where humans would quickly and effectively adapt. The aim is to develop technology whose performance would be minimally degraded by input signal variations. * Parallel Processing For Speech And Language: A broad variety of pattern recognition problems in speech and language require a large amount of computation and must be run on a large amount of data. There is a need to optimize these algorithms to increase throughput and improve cost effectiveness. Proposals are invited both for novel parallelizable algorithms and for hardware configurations that achieve higher throughput or lower speed-power product than can be achieved by optimizing either alone. An independent panel of experts will screen all received proposals for suitability. Results of this screening will be communicated no later than October 19, 2007. Authors passing this initial screening will be invited to Baltimore to present their ideas to a peer-review panel on November 2-4, 2007. It is expected that the proposals will be revised at this meeting to address any outstanding concerns or new ideas. Two or three research topics and the teams to tackle them will be selected for the 2008 workshop. We attempt to bring the best researchers to the workshop to collaboratively pursue the selected topics for six weeks. Authors of successful proposals typically become the team leaders. Each topic brings together a diverse team of researchers and students. The senior participants come from academia, industry and government. Graduate student participants familiar with the field are selected in accordance with their demonstrated performance, usually by the senior researchers. Undergraduate participants, selected through a national search, will be rising seniors who are new to the field and have shown outstanding academic promise. If you are interested to participate in the 2008 Summer Workshop we ask that you submit a one-page research proposal for consideration, detailing the problem to be addressed. If your proposal passes the initial screening, we will invite you to join us for the organizational meeting in Baltimore (as our guest) for further discussions aimed at consensus. If a topic in your area of interest is chosen as one of the two or three to be pursued next summer, we expect you to be available for participation in the six-week workshop. We are not asking for an ironclad commitment at this juncture, just a good faith understanding that if a project in your area of interest is chosen, you will actively pursue it. Proposals should be submitted via e-mail to clsp jhu.edu by 5PM ET on Wed, October 17, 2007.
Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics
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