LINGUIST List 21.229
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Thu Jan 14 2010
Calls: Computational Ling, Text/Corpus Ling/Sweden
Editor for this issue: Kate Wu
<kate linguistlist.org>
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Directory
1. Nianwen
Xue,
Fourth Linguistic Annotation Workshop
Message 1: Fourth Linguistic Annotation Workshop
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Date: 12-Jan-2010
From: Nianwen Xue <xuen brandeis.edu>
Subject: Fourth Linguistic Annotation Workshop
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Full Title: Fourth Linguistic Annotation Workshop Short Title: LAW IV Date: 15-Jul-2010 - 16-Jul-2010 Location: Uppsala, Sweden Contact Person: Nianwen Xue Meeting Email: xuen brandeis.edu Web Site: http://www.cs.brandeis.edu/~clp/LAW4 Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics; Text/Corpus Linguistics Call Deadline: 05-Apr-2010 Meeting Description: The Fourth Linguistic Annotation Workshop (LAW IV) Held in conjunction with ACL-2010 Uppsala, Sweden 15-16 July 2010 http://www.cs.brandeis.edu/~clp/LAW4 First Call for Papers Linguistic annotation of natural language corpora is the backbone of supervised methods for statistical natural language processing. The Fourth LAW will provide a forum for presentation and discussion of innovative research on all aspects of linguistic annotation, including the creation/evaluation of annotation schemes, methods for automatic and manual annotation, use and evaluation of annotation software and frameworks, representation of linguistic data and annotations, etc. As in the past, the LAW will serve as a venue for annotation researchers to work towards standardization, best practices, and interoperability of annotation information and software. Specifically, the goals of this workshop include: (1) The exchange and propagation of research results with respect to the annotation, manipulation and exploitation of corpora, taking into account different applications and theoretical investigations in the field of language technology and research; (2) Working towards the harmonization and interoperability from the perspective of the increasingly large number of tools and frameworks that support the creation, instantiation, manipulation, querying, and exploitation of annotated resources; (3) Pushing the frontier of linguistic annotation and of human language technology by extending the range of linguistic phenomena for which reliable annotation techniques exist. (4) Working towards a consensus on all issues crucial to the advancement of the field of corpus annotation. We invite submissions of long papers and posters, and demonstrations relating to any aspect of the linguistic annotation. Long papers should reflect work in an advanced state, but posters may describe more preliminary work and pilot studies. Posters and proposals for a system demonstration are to be submitted in the form of a short paper. A demonstration proposal should provide an overview of the system to be demonstrated, including functionality, supported input/output formats or structures, supported languages and modalities, etc. Accepted proposals will also appear in the proceedings and are intended to provide background for the demonstration. Papers are invited to address issues in all aspects of linguistic annotation, including but not limited to: Annotation Schemes: - New and innovative annotation schemes - Comparison of annotation schemes Annotation Procedures: - Innovative automated and manual strategies for annotation - Creation, maintenance, and interactive exploration of annotation structures and annotated data Annotation Software and Frameworks: - Machine learning and knowledge-based methods for automation of corpus annotation - Development, evaluation and/or innovative use of annotation software frameworks - Using games and "human computation" (e.g., Mechanical Turk) for annotation Annotation Evaluation: - Inter-annotator agreement and other evaluation metrics and strategies - Qualitative evaluation of linguistic representation Annotation access and use: - Representation formats/structures for merged annotations of different phenomena, and means to explore/manipulate them - Linguistic considerations for merging annotations of distinct phenomena Annotation guidelines and standards: - Best practices for annotation procedures and/or development and documentation of annotation schemes - Interoperability of annotation formats and/or frameworks among different systems as well as different tasks, frameworks, modalities, and languages The special themes for LAW IV are: - Demands on annotation for machine-learning purposes, such as the size and composition of annotated corpora, the granularity of the linguistic categories that are amenable to supervised machine learning - Annotation of text transcripts of informal modalities: spoken language, blogs, correspondence, etc. - Annotation of figurative language (metaphor, metonymy, etc.) Submissions Long paper submissions should not exceed 8 pages in length. Posters and demo descriptions should not exceed 4 pages. Format requirements are the same as for full papers of ACL 2010. See http://acl2010.org/authors.html for style files. Submission will be electronic, using the Workshop's submission webpage at START: https://www.softconf.com/acl2010/LAW/ Please indicate on the front page: - long paper, poster, or demonstration proposal; - all applicable paper categories from the following list (indicate multiple categories if appropriate): annotation frameworks and/or physical formats, annotation scheme design (on linguistic grounds), annotation tools and systems, corpus annotation, syntax, semantics, predicate-argument structure, morphology, anaphora, discourse, opinion/sentiment, annotation for machine learning, informal modalities, figurative languages; - language(s) your work applies to, as well as those you plan to handle in the future. If your work is language independent, indicate this as well; - any non-standard equipment needed for your paper or demonstration. All papers must be written and presented in English. Reviewing The reviewing of the papers will be blind. The paper should not include the authors' names and affiliations. Furthermore, self-citations and other references (e.g. to projects, corpora, or software) that could reveal the author's identity should be avoided. For example, instead of "We previously showed (Smith, 1991)...", write "Smith previously showed (Smith, 1991) ...". Important Dates Papers due: April 5, 2010 Acceptance/rejection notification: May 6, 2010 Camera-ready final version due: May 16, 2010 Workshop Dates: July 15-16, 2010 Organizers Nancy Ide (Vassar College) Adam Meyers (New York University) Chu-Ren Huang (The Hong Kong PolytechnicUniversity) Antonio Pareja-Lora (SIC, UCM / OEG, UPM) Sameer Pradhan (BBN Technologies) Manfred Stede (Universität Potsdam) Nianwen Xue (Brandeis University) Program Committee Co-chairs: Nianwen Xue (Brandeis University) Massimo Poesio (University of Trento) Program Committee Members: Nicoletta Calzolari (ILC/CNR) Steve Cassidy (Macquarie University) Tomaz Erjavec (Josef Stefan Institute) Katrin Erk (University of Texas at Austin) Alex Chengyu Fang (City University of Hong Kong) Chu-Ren Huang (The Hong Kong Polytechnic University) Nancy Ide (Vassar College) Richard Johansson (University of Trento) Aravind Joshi (University of Pennsylvania) Sandra Kubler (Indiana University) Seth Kulick (University of Pennsylvania) Adam Meyers (New York University) Eleni Miltsakaki (University of Pennsylvania) Antonio Pareja-Lora (SIC, UCM / OEG, UPM) Martha Palmer (University of Colorado) Rebecca J. Passonneau (Columbia University) Marta Recasens Potau (Universitat de Barcelona) Sameer Pradhan (BBN Technologies) Rashmi Prasad (University of Pennsylvania) Arndt Riester (Universität Stuttgart) James Pustejovsky (Brandeis University) Kepa Rodriguez (University of Trento) Anna Rumshisky (Brandeis University) Manfred Stede (Universität Potsdam) Marc Verhagen (Brandeis University) Theresa Wilson (University of Edinburgh) Andreas Witt (Universität Tübingen)
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