Corpora: First CFP for EMNLP 2001

From: Lillian Lee (llee@CS.Cornell.EDU)
Date: Sun Jan 21 2001 - 23:32:41 MET

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    *** PRELIMINARY CALL FOR PAPERS FOR EMNLP 2001 ***

    2001 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing

    SIGDAT, the Association for Computational Linguistics' special
    interest group on linguistic data and corpus-based approaches to NLP,
    invites submissions to EMNLP 2001. The conference will be held at
    Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA USA on June 3 and 4,
    immediately preceding the meeting of the North American Chapter of the
    ACL (NAACL).

    We are interested in papers from academia and industry on all areas of
    traditional interest to the SIGDAT community and aligned fields,
    including but not limited to:

    * information extraction
    * information retrieval
    * language and dialog modeling
    * lexical acquisition
    * machine translation
    * multilingual technologies
    * question answering
    * statistical parsing
    * summarization
    * tagging
    * term and named entity extraction
    * word sense disambiguation
    * word, term, and text segmentation

    Also, to encourage reflection on the current state of the art in
    corpus-based methods, the conference will have the following theme:

      "What Works and What Doesn't: Successes and Challenges"

    Successes --- We solicit papers showing the success of empirical
    methods in and across application settings. Examples include
    improvements in information retrieval performance due to employing
    language modeling techniques; effective use of statistical word
    segmentation algorithms in machine translation systems; and increased
    speech recognition accuracy through the incorporation of statistical
    parsing.

    Challenges --- It is clear that empirical and corpus-based methods
    have enjoyed many successes over the past years; but in looking to
    future accomplishments, the community needs to be aware of the
    limitations of various techniques and paradigms. We welcome papers
    that carefully expose and study such limitations. Examples include the
    identification and exploration of: classes of domains or problems in
    which popular techniques perform poorly; significant gaps between
    human and machine performance on tasks where statistical approaches
    have made great progress; and important practical situations where
    common assumptions fail to hold. *** We emphasize that we seek
    submissions that thoughtfully document fundamental limitations, rather
    than simply report on unsuccessful experiments. *** It is desired that
    such papers contain thorough examination, via careful experimentation,
    of the critical factors contributing to the "negative" result.

    SUBMISSIONS:

    Submissions should take the form of full papers (3200 words or
    less, excluding references) describing original work. Papers being
    submitted to other meetings must provide this information on the title
    page.

    IMPORTANT DATES:

    Submission deadline: March 13, 2001
    Acceptance notification: April 13, 2001
    Camera-ready copy due: May 3, 2001
    Conference: June 3-4, 2001

    CONFERENCE ORGANIZERS:

    Lillian Lee (chair), Cornell University, llee@cs.cornell.edu
    Donna Harman (co-chair), NIST, donna.harman@nist.gov

    CONFERENCE URL:
    http://www.cs.cornell.edu/home/llee/emnlp.html



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