LINGUIST List 19.3923
|
Sat Dec 20 2008
Calls: Computational Ling/USA; Computational Ling/South Africa
Editor for this issue: Kate Wu
<kate linguistlist.org>
|
LINGUIST is pleased to announce the launch of an exciting new feature: Easy Abstracts! Easy Abs is a free abstract submission and review facility designed to help conference organizers and reviewers accept and process abstracts online. Just go to: http://www.linguistlist.org/confcustom, and begin your conference customization process today! With Easy Abstracts, submission and review will be as easy as 1-2-3!
|
Directory
1. Kevin Bretonnel
Cohen,
Software Engineering, Testing, and Quality Assurance for Natural Language Processing
2. Jakub
Piskorski,
Finite-State Methods and Natural Language Processing
Message 1: Software Engineering, Testing, and Quality Assurance for Natural Language Processing
|
Date: 19-Dec-2008
From: Kevin Bretonnel Cohen <kevin.cohen gmail.com>
Subject: Software Engineering, Testing, and Quality Assurance for Natural Language Processing
E-mail this message to a friend
Full Title: Software Engineering, Testing, and Quality Assurance for Natural Language Processing Short Title: SETQA-NLP 2009 Date: 05-Jun-2009 - 05-Jun-2009 Location: Boulder, CO, USA Contact Person: Kevin Bretonnel Cohen Meeting Email: kevin.cohen gmail.com Web Site: http://compbio.uchsc.edu/SETQA-NLP2009/index.shtml Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics Call Deadline: 06-Mar-2009 Meeting Description: SETQA-NLP 2009 is a workshop being held in conjunction with NAACL-HLT 2009 in Boulder, Colorado. Call for Papers Software Engineering, Testing, and Quality Assurance for Natural Language Processing An NAACL-HLT 2009 workshop Boulder, CO June 5, 2009 http://compbio.uchsc.edu/SETQA-NLP2009 Natural language, as an input type, has unique characteristics that present special problems for software testing, quality assurance, and even requirements specification. This workshop is intended to stimulate research in all areas of software engineering for natural language processing. The goals of the workshop include raising awareness of the need for good software engineering practices in NLP, stimulating research on same, and disseminating the results of current work in this area. The target audience is researchers interested in natural language processing software, including testing and standardization, as well as grammar engineering. Submissions of full papers and poster abstracts are solicited in all areas of software and grammar engineering, testing and quality assurance as they relate to natural language processing. Some suggested areas are: - Patterns for design, coding, refactoring, and unit testing of language processing systems - Test suite design and generation - Special issues in metrology for natural language processing - Grammar/rule engineering - Usability - Standardization of tools and/or resources - Design for and evaluation of reliability and robustness - Scalability issues in training and deployment - Reusability and toolkit design - Concurrency and multithreading for NLP - Theoretical issues in software engineering for NLP Important Dates Submission deadline: Monday, March 6, 2009, 11:59 PM East Coast time Notification of acceptance: Monday, April 6, 2009 Camera-ready copy due: Monday, April 13, 2009 Workshop: Friday, June 5, 2009 Submission Instructions Full papers: Revised ACL guidelines for full papers this year allow for 8 pages of text plus one page of references. Poster abstracts: Poster abstracts should not exceed two (2) pages. Accepted abstracts will be published in a separate section of the workshop proceedings. Appropriate poster topics include preliminary results, application notes, descriptions of work in progress, etc. Submission format: Submissions must be in PDF and should follow the two-column format of the ACL proceedings. Ensure that you are *not* in A4 format. Please see the conference website for detailed typesetting specifications. Authors are strongly encouraged to use the LaTeX or Microsoft Word style files available on the ACL meeting website at http://clear.colorado.edu/NAACLHLT2009/stylefiles.html. Submit your paper or abstract via the workshop web site at https://www.softconf.com/naacl-hlt09/SETQANLP2009/ by 11:59 PM on Monday, March 6, East Coast time. Submissions need not be anonymous. Authors who cannot submit a PDF file electronically should contact the workshop organizers well in advance of the submission deadline. Dual submission policy: Papers may not be submitted to the software engineering, testing, and quality assurance workshop if they are or will be concurrently submitted to another meeting or publication. Program Committee Chairs K. Bretonnel Cohen, U. Colorado School of Medicine and MITRE Marc Light, Thomson Reuters Research Members William A. Baumgartner, Jr., U. Colorado School of Medicine Shannon Bradshaw, Drew U. Bob Carpenter, Alias-i Hamish Cunningham, U. Sheffield Dan Flickinger, Stanford U. Michael Gamon, Microsoft Tracy King, PowerSet James Lyle, Microsoft Kevin Markey, Silver Creek Systems Stephan Oepen, Stanford U. Martha Palmer, U. Colorado at Boulder Jeff Reynar Charles Schafer, Google Jun'ichi Tsujii, U. Tokyo and UK National Centre for Text Mining Martin Volk, U. Stockholm Scott A. Waterman, Powerset Ken Williams, Thomson Reuters Research
Message 2: Finite-State Methods and Natural Language Processing
|
Date: 19-Dec-2008
From: Jakub Piskorski <Jakub.Piskorski jrc.it>
Subject: Finite-State Methods and Natural Language Processing
E-mail this message to a friend
Full Title: Finite-State Methods and Natural Language Processing Short Title: FSMNLP 2009 Date: 21-Jul-2009 - 24-Jul-2009 Location: Pretoria, South Africa Contact Person: Jakub Piskorski Meeting Email: Jakub.Piskorski jrc.it Web Site: http://fsmnlp2009.fastar.org Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics; General Linguistics; Morphology Call Deadline: 22-Mar-2009 Meeting Description: Finite-State Methods and Natural Language Processing FSMNLP 2009 Eight International Workshop University of Pretoria, South Africa http://fsmnlp2009.fastar.org 21-24 July 2009 As in 2008, FSMNLP is merged with the FASTAR (Finite Automata Systems Theoretical and Applied Research) workshop. Call for Papers Scope Aim The International Workshop Series of Finite State Methods and Natural Language Processing (FSMNLP), is a forum for researchers and practitioners working on - NLP applications or language (technology) research resources, - theoretical and implementation aspects, or - their combinations having obvious relevance or an explicitly discussed relation to Finite-State Methods in NLP. In the past, seven FSMNLP workshops have been organised (Budapest 1996, Ankara 1998, Helsinki 2001, Budapest 2003, Helsinki 2005, Potsdam 2007, Ispra 2008). We invite submissions related to all obvious or traditional FSMNLP topics, see e.g. FSMNLP 2008. The updated list of topics includes All the obvious or traditional topics plus some new topics such as: - common interfaces, portability, and shared methods for testing/benchmarking/ evaluation of finite-state tools - coping with large alphabets during finite-state compilation and in real- word applications - fixed parameter tractability and narrowness in streamed NLP - conventional/parallel algorithms using/manipulating conventional/ stochastic finite-state automata/paths - applications of rational kernels to active/statistical machine learning of finite-state models. Special Theme In recognition of its location on the African continent, this year's FSMNLP has Finite- State Methods for Under-Resourced Languages as a special theme. The theme is relevant to finite-state methods - applied to practical tasks such as language survey, elicitation, data collection, computer-aided annotation, morphological description, modelling and normalization, - considering demanding conditions such as linguistic complexity and diversity, scarce resources, research infrastructures, real- time grammar updates, - in language processing fields such as comparative linguistics, field linguistics, applied linguistics, language teaching, and computer-aided translation. The special theme does not restrict the scope but attempts to draw the attention of contributors to the challenges of computational linguistics in Africa. We hope that the theme teases out promising and useful applications of Finite-State Methods in this context. Special Sessions Related Events Our plan is to catalyze discussion and subworkshopping under some intense topics by providing tutorials, competitions (shared tasks), and sessions/submissions suited for e.g. researcher training. Our special effort to catalyze discussion and joint subworkshopping includes the following topic areas that have been selected considering the opportunities provided by the location of this year's event: 1. "Finite-State Methods for African and Other Under-Resourced/ Low- Density Languages" including knowledge and data-driven methods and their combinations 2. "Practical Aspects and Experience of FS Methods and Systems" including exchange formats, performance, tool demos, compression 3. "Tree Automata and Transducers" including all applications of formal tree language theory in NLP. Each such program is organized by international experts related to the topics. The organizers are also represented in the main event Program Committee. Tutorials and Invited Talks We expect to have tutorials on the following tentative topics: - "Developing Computational Morphology for Low/Middle-Density Languages" by Kemal Oflazer - "Machine Learning with Automata" by Colin de la Higuera The Invited Speakers will be announced later. Competitions We hope to be able to include small competitions / shared tasks: - machine learning of morphology - compression of dictionaries Business Meeting We wish to provide a slot for a business meeting of a special interest group on finite-state methods and models provided that the necessary initial actions for getting such a SIG in Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL) have been carried out successfully before the FSMNLP 2009. Submission Paper Categories and Formats We initially invite submissions of full papers i.e. scientific contributions presenting new theoretical or experimental results. Papers should present original, unpublished research results and should not be submitted elsewhere simultaneously. At a later stage, submission of extended abstracts on on-going research, systems, interactive software demos, and joint projects will likely be invited for each of the subworkshopping areas. (Note that the early acceptance notification date for full papers may help to keep travel costs for international participants reasonably low.) If you come from far away and have only an extended abstract, the abstract can be submitted earlier as if it were a full paper. The information about the author(s) should be omitted in the submitted papers since the review process will be double blind (submissions by ordinary PC members are such as well). Submissions are electronic and in PDF format via a web-based submission server. Authors are encouraged to use Springer LNCS style (Proceedings and Other Multiauthor Volumes) for LaTeX in producing the PDF document. For graph visualization, Vaucanson-G LaTeX style, Graphviz/dot and XFig are recommended. If you use a non- roman script or Microsoft Word, it is advisable to warn the organizers as early as possible. The page limit is 12 pages for full papers. Proceedings and Special Journal Issue The on-site proceedings will be on CD. The actual proceedings with revised regular papers will be published after the conference in a volume of Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence as a part of the LNCS Series by Springer-Verlag. LNCS banner In addition, a special journal issue on Finite-State Methods and Models in NLP is being planned. Extended versions of the papers and abstracts may be submitted to this special issue (the publication involves a second review/selection cycle). Important Dates First call for papers: December 2008 Full paper submissions due: 22 March 2009 Notification of acceptance for full papers: 22 April 2009 Camera-ready versions of full papers due: 10 May 2009 Charis and Committees Conference Chair Bruce Watson (University of Pretoria) Program Committee Andras Kornai (Budapest Institute of Technology and MetaCarta) (chair) Jacques Sakarovitch (Ecole nationale supérieure des Télécomm.) (chair) Anssi Yli-Jyrä (University of Helsinki) (chair) Sonja Bosch (University of South Africa) Francisco Casacuberta (Instituto Tecnologico De Informática) Jean-Marc Champarnaud (Université de Rouen) Maxime Crochemore (King's College) Jan Daciuk (Gdańsk University of Technology) Dafydd Gibbon (University of Bielefeld) Karin Haenelt (Fraunhofer Gesellschaft and University of Heidelberg) Thomas Hanneforth (University of Potsdam) Colin de la Higuera (Jean Monnet University) Arvi Hurskainen (University of Helsinki) Lauri Karttunen (Palo Alto Research Center and Stanford University) André Kempe (Yahoo Search Technologies) Kevin Knight (University of Southern California) Derrick Kourie (University of Pretoria) Marcus Kracht (Univeristy of California) Hans-Ulrich Krieger (DFKI GmbH) Eric Laporte (Université de Marne-la-Vallée) Stoyan Mihov (Bulgarian Academy of Sciences) Kemal Oflazer (Sabanci University) Jakub Piskorski (Joint Research Center of the European Commission) Michael Riley (Google Research) Strahil Ristov (Ruder Boskovic Institute) James Rogers (Earlham College) Max Silberztein (Université de Franche-Comté) Bruce Watson (University of Pretoria) Sheng Yu (University of Western Ontario) Menno van Zaanen (Tilburg University) Lynette van Zijl (Stellenbosch University) (a few more to be added) Organizing Committee Loek Cleophas (University of Pretoria) (OC chair) Derrick Kourie (University of Pretoria) Jakub Piskorski (Joint Research Center of the European Commission) Bruce Watson (University of Pretoria) Anssi Yli-Jyrä (University of Helsinki)
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.
|
|