Corpora: ACL-2001 CoNLL-2001 Workshop Call for Papers

From: Priscilla Rasmussen (rasmusse@cs.rutgers.edu)
Date: Thu Mar 01 2001 - 19:50:02 MET

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                  APOLOGIES FROM MULTIPLE SUBMISSIONS

                       CALL FOR PAPERS
     
                          CoNLL-2001
        Fifth Computational Natural Language Learning Workshop
                  Toulouse, France, July 6-7, 2001

                 http://lcg-www.uia.ac.be/conll2001/

    BACKGROUND

    CoNLL is the yearly workshop organized by SIGNLL, the Association for
    Computational Linguistics Special Interest Group on Natural Language
    Learning (http://www.aclweb.org/signll/). Previous CoNLL meetings were
    held in Madrid (1997), Sydney (1998), Bergen (1999) and Lisbon
    (2000). The 2001 event will be held as a two-days workshop at the 39th
    Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL),
    July 6-11, 2001 in Toulouse, France.

    This year, a special theme will be the focus of the workshop:

        Interaction and Automation in Language Learning Resources

    Apart from this special theme, the workshop will accept contributions
    about language learning topics, including, but not limited to:

     - Computational models of human language acquisition
     - Computational models of the origins and evolution of language
     - Machine learning methods applied to natural language processing
       tasks (speech processing, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics,
       discourse processing, language engineering applications)
     - Symbolic learning methods (Rule Induction and Decision Tree
       Learning, Lazy Learning, Inductive Logic Programming, Analytical
       Learning, Transformation-based Error-driven Learning)
     - Biologically-inspired methods (Neural Networks, Evolutionary Computing)
     - Statistical methods (Bayesian Learning, HMM, maximum entropy, SNoW,
       Support Vector Machines)
     - Reinforcement Learning
     - Active learning, ensemble methods, meta-learning
     - Computational Learning Theory analyses of language learning
     - Empirical and theoretical comparisons of language learning methods
     - Models of induction and analogy in Linguistics

    This year's workshop will also accept submissions for a shared task
    (segmenting a text into clauses-clausing).

    THE WORKSHOP

    Main Session Theme: Interaction and Automation in Language Learning
    Resources

    The purpose of the special theme is to present and discuss
    state-of-the-art learning mechanisms for the automated acquisition of
    language resources (dictionaries, ontologies, grammars) or the
    automated adaptation of natural language resources/processors to new
    domains or languages.

    The dimensions of learning that are of interest for this session include:

    - The integration of humans/linguists in the learning process
    - The structure of the training data
    - The kind of knowledge that is learned
    - General study of learning methods that are suitable for natural
      language related tasks

    Lately there have been new learning mechanisms that use either large
    amounts of raw data or small sets of carefully constructed tagged
    training samples. Learning language can be construed as learning
    numbers or parameters for some statistical or symbolic system, or
    learning rules assigning structures to input data (or a mix of
    those). Learning can be done off-line, which introduces the problem of
    interpreting (if needed) the derived knowledge before its use in an
    NLP engine; or on-line, which raises user interaction
    problems. Different approaches are tailored to solve different kinds
    of problems subject to a different balance of requirements (large
    vs. small training set, tagged vs. untagged training data, results
    needs interpretation or can be used as is, etc.). While this session
    aims at presenting the largest panorama of learning techniques, we
    encourage submission of work on semi-automated learning techniques
    that involve interaction with a human during the learning process or
    the intervention of a linguist for interpreting results.

    Special Session: Shared Task - Segmenting Text Into Clauses

    We invite groups to take part in a shared task: Segmenting a Text Into
    Clauses (Clausing). Participating groups will be provided with the
    same training and testing material, and will all use the same
    evaluation criteria, thus allowing comparison between various learning
    technologies. After Chunking, the CoNLL-2000 shared task, Clausing
    can be seen as the next step towards a full parsing.

    More information on this shared task is available at:
       http://lcg-www.uia.ac.be/conll2001/clauses/

    Invited Session: Learning Computational Grammars

    There will be a special session devoted to the presentation and
    discussion of results of the EU Learning Computational Grammars
    project (Coordinator: John Nerbonne). Project participants include:
    the University of Groningen (The Netherlands, coordinator), University
    of Antwerp (Belgium), the University of Tuebingen (Germany), SRI
    Cambridge (UK), the University College Dublin (Ireland), the
    University of Geneva (Switzerland), and Xerox Grenoble (France).

    Invited Speaker: Eric Brill

    SUBMISSIONS

    Format for Paper Submissions for Main Session

    Submit an abstract of maximum 1500 words (Postscript or ASCII) by
    April 6, 2001 electronically to the address below. Authors of accepted
    abstracts will be invited to produce a full paper to be published in
    the proceedings of the workshop, which will be available at the
    workshop for participants, and distributed afterwards by the
    ACL. Submit main session abstracts to:

    Walter Daelemans, walter.daelemans@uia.ua.ac.be
    Centrum Nederlandse Taal en Spraak.
    Linguistics, Department of Germanic languages and literature
    UIA, University of Antwerp
    Universiteitsplein 1, B-2610 Wilrijk, Belgium

    or

    Rémi Zajac, zajac@crl.nmsu.edu
    Computing Research Laboratory
    New Mexico State University
    PO Box 30001 Dept. 3CRL
    Las Cruces NM 88003
    USA

    Format For Shared Task Submissions

    Submit an abstract of maximum 1500 words describing the learning
    approach, and your results on the test set by April 6, 2001 to the
    address below (preferably by email). A special section of the
    proceedings will be devoted to a comparison and analysis of the
    results and to a description of the approaches used. Submit shared
    task submissions to:

    Erik Tjong Kim Sang, erikt@uia.ua.ac.be
    Centrum Nederlandse Taal en Spraak
    Linguistics, Department of Germanic languages and literature
    UIA, University of Antwerp
    Universiteitsplein 1, B-2610 Wilrijk, Belgium

    Important dates

    Deadline for Abstract Submission: April 6, 2001
    Deadline for Shared Task Submission: April 6, 2001
    Notification: April 27, 2001
    Deadline camera-ready full paper: May 16, 2001
    Workshop: July 6/7, 2001

    PROGRAMME COMMITTEE

    Walter Daelemans (co-chair)
    Rémi Zajac (co-chair)
    Thorsten Brants (Xerox PARC, USA)
    Michael Brent (Washington University in Saint Louis, USA)
    Claire Cardie (Cornell University, USA)
    James Cussens (University of York, UK)
    Herve Dejean (University of Tuebingen, Germany)
    Gregory Grefenstette (Xerox Grenoble, France)
    Raymond Mooney (University of Texas at Austin, USA)
    John Nerbonne (Groningen University, Netherlands)
    Kemal Oflazer (Sabanci University, Turkey)
    Miles Osborne (University of Edinburgh, UK),
    David Powers (Flinders University, Australia)
    Ronan Reilly (University College Dublin, Ireland)
    Dan Roth (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA)
    Erik Tjong Kim Sang (University of Antwerp, Belgium)
    Antal van den Bosch (Tilburg University, Netherlands)
    Yorick Wilks (University of Sheffield, UK)
     



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