LINGUIST List 19.3737
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Sat Dec 06 2008
Calls: Computational Ling,General Ling/USA; Computational Ling/Greece
Editor for this issue: Kate Wu
<kate linguistlist.org>
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Directory
1. Fernando
Diaz,
The 32nd Annual ACM SIGIR Conference
2. Aline
Villavicencio,
Cognitive Aspects of Computational Lang. Acquisition
Message 1: The 32nd Annual ACM SIGIR Conference
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Date: 04-Dec-2008
From: Fernando Diaz <fdiaz cs.umass.edu>
Subject: The 32nd Annual ACM SIGIR Conference
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Full Title: The 32nd Annual ACM SIGIR Conference Short Title: SIGIR 2009 Date: 19-Jul-2009 - 23-Jul-2009 Location: Boston, MA, USA Contact Person: James Allan Meeting Email: allan cs.umass.edu Web Site: http://sigir2009.org/ Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics; General Linguistics Call Deadline: 26-Jan-2009 Meeting Description: The 32nd Annual ACM SIGIR Conference July 19-23 2009, Boston, USA SIGIR is the major international forum for the presentation of new research results and for the demonstration of new systems and techniques in the broad field of information retrieval (IR). Call for Papers The Conference and Program Chairs invite all those working in areas related to IR to submit original papers, posters, and proposals for tutorials, workshops, and demonstrations of systems. SIGIR 2009 welcomes contributions related to any aspect of IR theory and foundation, techniques, and applications. Relevant topics include, but are not limited to: - IR Theory and Models (e.g., all kinds of formal IR models including language models and fusion of results, user/task-based IR theory) -IR Platforms and Scalability (e.g., IR architecture including distributed/P2P, efficiency, scalability, indexing, compression) - IR Evaluation (e.g., test collections, evaluation methods and metrics, experimental design, data collection and analysis) - Document Representation and Content Analysis (e.g., text representation, document structure/discourse analysis, linguistic analysis-based representation, non-topical representation) - Query Language and Query Analysis (e.g., structured queries, query representation, query intent analysis) - User Modeling and Interactive IR (e.g., user models, user studies, user interface and visualization, all kinds of feedback techniques, query log analysis, personalized search) - Machine Learning for IR (e.g., learning to rank, probabilistic topic models, all kinds of learning techniques applied to IR) - Information Extraction and Summarization (e.g., entity/relation extraction, sentiment analysis, summarization, discovery of knowledge/patterns from text) - Categorization, Clustering, and Filtering (e.g., text categorization, clustering, content-based filtering, collaborative filtering) - Multimedia IR (e.g., image IR, video IR, speech/audio IR, music IR, analysis of multimedia content) - Question Answering and Cross-Language IR (e.g., question answering, non-English IR, cross-language IR, machine translation for IR) - Web IR (e.g., link analysis, query log analysis, social tagging, social networks, ad targeting, blog/forum IR) - Digital Libraries and Other IR Applications (e.g., digital libraries, enterprise/intranet search, distributed IR, genomics IR, mobile IR, any domain-specific IR application) - IR and Database Search (e.g., XML retrieval, structured queries, ranking in databases) Important Dates: Jan 19, 2009 Abstracts for full research papers due Jan 26, 2009 Full research paper submissions due Feb 2, 2009 Workshop proposals due Feb 23, 2009 Posters, demonstration, and tutorial proposals due Mar 2, 2009 Doctoral consortium proposals due Mar 9, 2009 Notification of workshop acceptances Apr 11, 2009 All other acceptance notification Information on how to submit will be available by mid-December, 2008 at http://www.sigir2009.org/ General Co-chairs: James Allan (University of Massachusetts at Amherst, USA) Javed Aslam (Northeastern University, USA) Technical Program Co-chairs: Mark Sanderson (University of Sheffield, UK) ChengXiang Zhai (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA) Justin Zobel (University of Melbourne, Australia) Senior Program Committee (Area Chairs): Eugene Agichtein, Emory University, USA Nick Belkin, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, USA Jamie Callan, Carnegie Mellon University, USA Soumen Chakrabarti, Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay, India Hsin-Hsi Chen, National Taiwan University, Taiwan Tat-Seng Chua, National University of Singapore, Singapore Charlie Clarke, University of Waterloo, Canada Fabio Crestani, Università della Svizzera italiana, Switzerland Bruce Croft, University of Massachusetts at Amherst, USA Maarten de Rijke, Universiteit van Amsterdam, The Netherlands Susan Dumais, Microsoft Research Redmond, USA Ed Fox, Virginia Tech, USA Norbert Fuhr, Universität Duisburg-Essen, Germany Djoerd Hiemstra, Universiteit Twente, The Netherlands Rong Jin, Michigan State University, USA Gareth Jones, Dublin City University, Ireland Rosie Jones, Yahoo! Research, USA Tie-Yan Liu, Microsoft Research Asia, China Natasa Milic-Frayling, Microsoft Research, Cambridge, UK Alistair Moffat, University of Melbourne, Australia Isabelle Moulinier, Thomson Reuters, USA Ian Ruthven, University of Strathclyde, UK Tetsuya Sakai, NewsWatch, Japan Jacques Savoy, Université de Neuchâtel, Switzerland Hinrich Schütze, University of Stuttgart Germany Fabrizio Sebastiani, CNR, Italy Luo Si, Purdue University, USA Nicola Stokes, University College Dublin, Ireland Hwee Tou Ng, National University of Singapore, Singapore Ellen Voorhees, NIST, USA Manmatha R, University of Massachusetts at Amherst, USA For other details, please see the conference web site.
Message 2: Cognitive Aspects of Computational Lang. Acquisition
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Date: 04-Dec-2008
From: Aline Villavicencio <avillavicencio inf.ufrgs.br>
Subject: Cognitive Aspects of Computational Lang. Acquisition
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Full Title: Cognitive Aspects of Computational Lang. Acquisition Date: 30-Mar-2009 - 31-Mar-2009 Location: Athens, Greece Contact Person: Aline Villavicencio Meeting Email: cognitive2009 gmail.com Web Site: http://www-lipn.univ-paris13.fr/~poibeau/cognitive/ Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics Call Deadline: 19-Dec-2008 Meeting Description: EACL 2009 Workshop on Cognitive Aspects of Computational Language Acquisition 30 or 31 March 2009 Athens, Greece http://www-lipn.univ-paris13.fr/~poibeau/cognitive/ Final Call for Papers Workshop Description This workshop is focused on the relevance of computational learning methods for research on human language acquisition. Developing and applying such computational techniques that can improve our understanding of human language acquisition will not only benefit cognitive sciences in general, but will also reflect back to NLP and place us in a better position to develop useful language models. The workshop aims to bring together researchers from the diverse fields of NLP, machine learning, artificial intelligence, (psycho)linguistics, etc. who are interested in the relevance of computational techniques for understanding human language learning. The workshop is intended to bridge the gap between the computational and cognitive communities, promote knowledge and resource sharing, and help initiate interdisciplinary research projects. Success in this type of research requires close collaboration between NLP and cognitive scientists. To this end, interdisciplinary workshops can play a key role in advancing existing and initiating new research. This was demonstrated by some successful events like the previous edition of this workshop held at ACL 2007. Areas of interest Papers are invited on, but not limited to, the following topics: - Computational learning theory and analysis of language learning - Computational models of human (first, second and bilingual) language acquisition - Computational models of various aspects of language acquisition, and their interaction with each other - Computational models of the evolution of language - Data resources and tools for investigating computational models of human language acquisition - Empirical and theoretical comparisons of the learning environment and its impact on the acquisition task - Computational methods for acquiring various linguistic information (related to e.g. speech, morphology, lexicon, syntax, semantics, and discourse) and their relevance to research on human language acquisition - Investigations and comparisons of supervised, unsupervised and weakly-supervised methods for learning (e.g. machine learning, statistical, symbolic, biologically-inspired, active learning, various hybrid models) from the cognitive aspect Papers can cover one or more of these areas. Submission Information Papers should describe original work and should indicate the state of completion of the reported results. In particular, any overlap with previously published work should be clearly mentioned. Submissions will be judged on correctness, novelty, technical strength, clarity of presentation, usability, and significance/relevance to the workshop. Submissions should follow the two-column format of the EACL 2009 main-conference proceedings and should not exceed eight (8) pages, including references. We strongly recommend the use of either the LaTeX style file or the Microsoft-Word Style file, which can be found at http://www.eacl2009.gr/conference/authors. The reviewing will be blind. Therefore, the paper should not include the authors' names and affiliations. Furthermore, self- citations and other references that could reveal the author's identity should be avoided. Submission will be electronic. The only accepted format for submitted papers is Adobe PDF. Papers must be submitted no later than December 19, 2008 using the submission webpage that will be available soon. Submissions will be reviewed by 3 members of the Program Committee. Authors of accepted papers will receive guidelines regarding how to produce camera-ready versions of their papers for inclusion in the EACL workshop proceedings. Notification of receipt will be emailed to the contact author. Important Dates - Paper submission deadline: 19 December 2008 - Acceptance notification sent: 30 January 2009 - Final version deadline: 13 February 2009 - Workshop date: 30 or 31 March 2009 Workshop Chairs - Thierry Poibeau (CNRS and University Paris 13, France) - Afra Alishahi (University of Saarland, Germany)) - Aline Villavicencio (Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil and University of Bath, UK) Address any queries regarding the workshop to: cognitive2009 gmail.com Program Committee - Colin J Bannard (Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Germany) - Marco Baroni (University of Trento, Italy) - Robert C. Berwick (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA) - Jim Blevins (University of Cambridge, UK) - Rens Bod (University of Amsterdam, Netherlands) - Antal van den Bosch (Tilburg University, The Netherlands) - Chris Brew (Ohio State University, USA) - Ted Briscoe (University of Cambridge, UK) - Robin Clark (University of Pennsylvania, USA) - Stephen Clark (University of Oxford, UK) - Matthew W. Crocker (Saarland University, Germany) - James Cussens (University of York, UK) - Walter Daelemans (University of Antwerp, Belgium and Tilburg University, The Netherlands) - Ted Gibson (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA) - Henriette Hendriks (University of Cambridge, UK) - Julia Hockenmaier (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA) - Marco Idiart (Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil) - Mark Johnson (Brown University, USA) - Aravind Joshi (University of Pennsylvania, USA) - Anna Korhonen (University of Cambridge, UK) - Alessandro Lenci (University of Pisa, Italy) - Massimo Poesio (University of Trento, Italy) - Brechtje Post (University of Cambridge, UK) - Ari Rappoport (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel) - Dan Roth (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA) - Kenji Sagae (University of Southern California, USA) - Sabine Schulte im Walde (University of Stuttgart, Germany) - Mark Steedman (University of Edinburgh, UK) - Suzanne Stevenson (University of Toronto, Canada) - Patrick Sturt (University of Edinburgh, UK) - Bert Vaux (University of Wisconsin, USA) - Charles Yang (University of Pennsylvania, USA) - Menno van Zaanen (Macquarie University, Australia) - Michael Zock (LIF, CNRS, Marseille, France)
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