LINGUIST List 19.2359
|
Mon Jul 28 2008
Calls: Cog Sci,Semantics/Germany; Computational Ling,Semantics/USA
Editor for this issue: F. Okki Kurniawan
<okki linguistlist.org>
|
As a matter of policy, LINGUIST discourages the use of abbreviations
or acronyms in conference announcements unless they are explained in
the text. To post to LINGUIST, use our convenient web form at
http://linguistlist.org/LL/posttolinguist.html.
|
Directory
1. Carla
Umbach,
DGfS-workshop on Comparison and Similarity
2. Scott
Crossley,
Applied Natural Language Processing Special Track
Message 1: DGfS-workshop on Comparison and Similarity
|
Date: 28-Jul-2008
From: Carla Umbach <carla.umbach uos.de>
Subject: DGfS-workshop on Comparison and Similarity
E-mail this message to a friend
Full Title: DGfS-workshop on Comparison and Similarity Short Title: Comparison&Similarity Date: 04-Mar-2009 - 06-Mar-2009 Location: Osnabrueck, Germany Contact Person: Carla Umbach Meeting Email: comparison cogsci.uni-osnabrueck.de Web Site: http://www.cogsci.uni-osnabrueck.de/CL/comparison Linguistic Field(s): Cognitive Science; Psycholinguistics; Semantics; Typology Call Deadline: 31-Jul-2008 Meeting Description: The workshop is part of the 31. annual meeting of the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Sprachwissenschaft (DGfS). We would like to address the question of what strategies there are in natural languages to express comparison, how theses strategies can be modeled, and how these strategies relate to the findings from Cognitive Psychology. We are interested in semantic/pragmatic approaches as well as contrastive/typological studies and, in particular, contributions from Cognitive Psychology. Final Call for Papers ''Comparison constructions and similarity-based classification'' Workshop at the 31. annual meeting of the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Sprachwissenschaft (DGfS), 4.- 6. March, 2009, Osnabrück Deadline for abstract submission: July 31, 2008 Workshop description and details of abstract submission can be found at: http://www.cogsci.uni-osnabrueck.de/CL/comparison/ Organizers: Carla Umbach (University of Osnabrück, carla.umbach 'at' uos.de) Klaus von Heusinger (University of Stuttgart, Klaus.vonHeusinger 'at' ling.uni-stuttgart.de)
Message 2: Applied Natural Language Processing Special Track
|
Date: 26-Jul-2008
From: Scott Crossley <sc544 msstate.edu>
Subject: Applied Natural Language Processing Special Track
E-mail this message to a friend
Full Title: Applied Natural Language Processing Special Track Date: 19-May-2009 - 21-May-2009 Location: Sanibel, Florida, USA Contact Person: Scott Crossley Meeting Email: sc544 msstate.edu Web Site: http://www.msstate.edu/dept/english/applied_nlp/flairs_2009 Linguistic Field(s): Applied Linguistics; Computational Linguistics; Neurolinguistics; Semantics; Text/Corpus Linguistics Call Deadline: 23-Nov-2008 Meeting Description: The track of Applied Natural Language Processing is a forum for researchers working in natural language processing (NLP), computational linguistics (CL), applied linguistics (AL) and related areas. Call for Papers Goal: NLP/CL developments in fields such as textual studies, speech recognition, speech production, data mining and numerous other fields have led to a rapid growth in interest in tools able to understand, organize, and extract information from natural language sources. This interest includes the analysis of online materials, most of them in textual form or text combined with other media (visual, audio), the use of innovative human-computer interfaces, such as interactive agents, which benefit from language understanding, and the use of computational tools to facilitate intelligent tutoring systems and instructional methodology. In addition, natural language processing can facilitate human-computer interaction for people with special needs, assist in the organization of classification systems, and coordinate text segmentation. Papers and contributions on all issues are very much welcome, but the track emphasizes and encourages submissions that present actual applications that can benefit from or have an impact on NLP/CL. General Topics: We invite original papers (i.e. work not previously submitted, in submission, or to be submitted to another conference during the reviewing process) that describe work in, but not limited to, the following areas: 1. Paraphrase or Entailment evaluation approaches 2. Textual assessment indices 3. NL-based Knowledge Representations and Systems 4. Coreference Resolution 5. Word Sense Disambiguation 6. Text Cohesion and Coherence 7. Dialogue Management and Systems 8. Language Generation 9. Language Models 10. Human Computer Interfaces - in particular, multimodal human-computer communication and language as the only acceptable human-computer communication channel for the handicapped and elderly 11. Machine Learning applied to NL problems 12. Multilingual Processing 13. Standardization, Language Resources, Corpora Building, and Annotation Languages 14. NL in Learning Environments 15. Semantic Web, Ontologies, Reasoning 16. Applications: Machine Translation, Summarization, Intelligent Tutoring, Question Answering, Information Extraction, etc. 17. Syntax 18. Semantics 19. Applied Linguistics and First and Second Language Acquisition 20. English for Specific Purposes 21. Others 22. The special topic: The User-Language Paraphrase Challenge Special Topic: This year, the ANLP track features a special topic, which is in addition to general topics for the track. The special topic is the User-Language Paraphrase Challenge. We are pleased to introduce the User-Language Paraphrase Challenge. We use the term User-Language to refer to the natural language input of users interacting with an intelligent tutoring system (ITS). The primary characteristics of user-language are that it is short (typically a single sentence) and that it is unedited (e.g., it is replete with typographical errors and lacking in grammaticality). We use the term paraphrase to refer to ITS users' attempt to restate a given target sentence in their own words such that a produced sentence, or user response, has the same meaning as the target sentence. The corpus in this challenge comprises 1998 target-sentence/student response text-pairs, or protocols. The protocols have been evaluated by expert human raters along 10 dimensions of paraphrase characteristics. Along with the protocols, the database comprising the challenge includes 10 computational indices that have been used to assess these protocols. The challenge we pose for researchers is to describe and assess their own approach (computational or statistical) to evaluating, characterizing, and/or categorizing, any, some, or all of the paraphrase dimensions in this corpus. The purpose of establishing such evaluations of user-language paraphrases is so that ITSs may provide users with accurate assessment and subsequently facilitative feedback, such that the assessment would be comparable to one or more trained human raters. As such, these evaluations will help to develop the field of natural language assessment and understanding. For full details of the challenge and all data go to: http://csep.psyc.memphis.edu/mcnamara/link.htm and click on User Language Paraphrase Corpus. Submission Guidelines for the ANLP track: Interested authors (for the general ANLP track or the special topic) should format their papers according to AAAI formatting guidelines. The papers should be original work (i.e., not submitted, in submission, or submitted to another conference while in review). Papers should not exceed 6 pages and are due by November 23rd, 2008. For FLAIRS-22, the 2009 conference, the reviewing is a double blind process. Fake author names and affiliations must be used on submitted papers to provide double-blind reviewing. Papers must be submitted as PDF through the EasyChair conference system. (n.b. Do not use a fake name for your EasyChair login - your EasyChair account information is hidden from reviewers). Authors should indicate the special track of ANLP for submissions. All submissions will be done electronically via the FLAIRS web submission system available through the paper submission site at http://www.easychair.org/FLAIRS-22/ Please, check the website http://www.flairs-22.info/ for information regarding submission. Conference Proceedings: Papers will be refereed and all accepted papers will appear in the conference proceedings which will be published by AAAI Press. Organizing Committee: Philip McCarthy, Institute for Intelligent Systems Scott Crossley, Mississippi State University Proposed Program Committee (additions will be made): Stephen Anthony, University of California San Diego, USA Sivaji Bandyopadhyay, Jadavpur Unviersity, India Cosmin Adrian Bejan, University of Texas at Dallas, USA Cederick Bellissens, Institute for Intelligent Systems, USA Chutima Boonthum, Hampton University, UK Stephen Briner, DePaul University, USA Peter Clark, Boeing, USA Nicoletta Calzolari, University of Pisa, Italy Joao Cordeiro, University of Beira Interior, Portugal Andrea Corradini, University of Potsdam, Germany Kyle Demsey, Institute for Intelligent Systems, USA Gael Dias, University of Beira Interior, Portugal Sidney D'Mello, Institute for Intelligent Systems, USA Nick Duran, Institute for Intelligent Systems, USA Asif Ekbal, Jadavpur University, India Anna Feldman, Montclair State University, USA Leo Ferres, Carleton University, Canada Andrew Gordon, University of Southern California, USA Charles Hall, University of Memphis, USA Christian Hempelmann, Hakia Inc., USA Diana Inkpen, University of Toronto, Canda Pamela Jordan, University of Pittsburgh, USA Christel Kemke, University of Manitoboa, Canada Yılmaz Kılıçaslan Trakya University, Turkey Christopher Kurby, Northern Illinois University, USA Max Louwerse, University of Memphis, USA Xiaofei Lu, Pennsylvania State University, USA Manish Mehta, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA Rada Mihalcea, University of North Texas, USA Roberto Navigli, University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy Tomasz Obrębski, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poland Andrew Olney, Institute for Intelligent Systems, USA Constantin Orasan, University of Wolverhampton, UK Katherine M Forbes Riley, University of Pittsburg, USA Graeme Ritchie, University of Aberdeen, UK Vasile Rus, University of Memphis, USA Stacey Todaro, Northern Illinois University, USA Savaş Yıldırım, Istanbul Bilgi University, Turkey Further Information: Questions regarding the ANLP Special Track should be addressed to the track co-chairs: Philip McCarthy, pmccarthy mail.psyc.memphis.edu Scott A. Crossley, sc544 msstate.edu Questions regarding the ANLP Special topic should be addressed to Philip McCarthy, pmccarthy mail.psyc.memphis.edu Questions regarding any other FLAIRS special tracks should be addressed to the special track co-ordinator: Philip McCarthy, pmccarthy mail.psyc.memphis.edu Questions regarding the conference should be addressed to the FLAIRS-2009 program co-chairs: David Wilson, University of North Carolina Charlotte, davils uncc.edu Geoff Sutcliffe, University of Miami, geoff cs.miami.edu General questions concerning the conference should be addressed to the FLAIRS-2008 conference co-chairs: Douglas D. Dankel II, University of Florida, ddd cise.ufl.edu Special Tracks Chair Philip McCarthy: pmccarthy mail.psyc.memphis.edu Invited Speakers: To be announced Conference Web Sites: Paper submission site: http://www.easychair.org/FLAIRS-22/ NLP Special Track web page: http://www.msstate.edu/dept/english/applied_nlp/flairs_2009 FLAIRS-2009 conference web page: http://www.flairs-22.info Florida AI Research Society (FLAIRS): http://www.flairs.com
Read more issues|LINGUIST home page|Top of issue
|
|

Please report any bad links or misclassified data
LINGUIST Homepage | Read
LINGUIST | Contact us

While the LINGUIST List makes every effort to ensure the linguistic relevance of sites listed on its pages, it cannot vouch for their contents.
|
|