Corpora: FINAL CFP: ACL-2001 Workshop on Temporal & Spatial Information Processing

From: Priscilla Rasmussen (rasmusse@cs.rutgers.edu)
Date: Wed Mar 21 2001 - 17:51:54 MET

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                                  FINAL CALL FOR PAPERS

                                    WORKSHOP ON
                               TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL
                               INFORMATION PROCESSING

              http://epsilon3.georgetown.edu/~discours/spacetime.html

                                ACL-2001 Conference
                                 Toulouse, France
                                    July 7, 2001

    Temporal and spatial information is ubiquitous in natural language, yet
    many challenging computational issues are relatively unexplored. This
    workshop will bring together researchers working on a variety of tasks
    that depend on representing spatial and temporal information in natural
    language.

    We invite papers on any topic dealing with automatic processing of
    spatial or temporal information in natural language. We welcome papers
    describing theoretical or practical work addressing issues in this area.

    As a special theme of this workshop, we would also like to encourage the
    discussion of common issues across spatial and temporal domains. For
    example, systems that process temporal or spatial information need to
    deal with *absolute* references ("November 18, 1999", "Toulouse"), as well as
    relative references ("now", "here", "two weeks ago", "thirty miles north
    of Paris"), and vague references ("some time in June", "a town in
    Provence", "nearly a year ago", "near Dusseldorf", "Tuesday morning", "southern
    England"). There are also many parallels between the way events are
    characterized in time and objects are characterized in space. For
    example, events can be described relative to some point or interval in time
    (e.g., "I met John yesterday", "he was crossing the street") while objects in
    space can be described in relation to some place, object, or in terms of
    movement (e.g., "the cup was on top of that", "it fell off").

    Topics

    The topics covered will include corpus-based, knowledge-based, and
    hybrid approaches to:

       * resolution of temporal and spatial references, especially
         discourse-dependent ones
       * standards for encoding the values of temporal and spatial
         expressions in natural language
       * temporal and spatial characterization of events
       * establishing coreference, ordering and inclusion relations in spatial
         or temporal information
       * computational analysis of tense and aspect
       * semantics of indeterminate or vague temporal and spatial references
       * semantics and pragmatics of spatial and temporal prepositions
       * leveraging of ontologies for spatial and temporal information
       * reasoning about modals, i.e., possible events, necessary events,
         counterfactual events, etc.
       * application of logics for spatial and temporal reasoning
       * analysis of temporal and spatial aspects of narrative structure
       * generation of temporal and spatial references
       * linguistic and graphical representations

    Application areas include:

       * machine translation (e.g., translating temporal and spatial
         references)
       * question answering (e.g., answering "when" or "where" questions)
       * information extraction (e.g., normalizing time values for entry into
         databases, disambiguating place names using a gazetteer)
       * summarization (e.g., producing temporally coherent summaries of
         multiple documents, or generating route plans)
       * information retrieval (e.g., indexing broadcast news by event time)
       * information visualization (e.g., constructing event chronologies,
         geospatial visualization)
       * multimodal interfaces (e.g., interfaces to simulations, gesture and
         speech input graphical applications, navigation systems)
       * interfaces to spatial and temporal databases (e.g., normalizing
         temporal and spatial references)
       * planning and problem solving
       * multimedia presentations (e.g., generating textual descriptions or
         captions, scene and route descriptions, generation of spatio-temporal
         maps)

    ORGANIZERS

    Lisa Harper, MITRE, USA
    Inderjeet Mani, MITRE and Georgetown University, USA
    Beth Sundheim, SPAWAR Systems Center, USA

    SPONSORS

    MITRE
    ACL SIGMEDIA

    PROGRAM COMMITTEE

    Elisabeth Andre, DFKI, Germany
    Myriam Bras, IRIT, France
    Rob Gaizauskas, Sheffield, UK
    Udo Hahn, Freiburg University, Germany
    Eduard Hovy, USC-ISI, USA
    Gerard Ligozat, LIMSI-CNSRS, France
    Ruslan Mitkov, University of Wolverhampton, UK
    Marc Moens, University of Edinburgh, UK
    Dragomir Radev, University of Michigan, USA
    Ellen Riloff, University of Utah, USA
    Laure Vieu, IRIT, France
    Michael White, Cogentex, USA
    Janyce Wiebe, University of Pittsburgh, USA
    George Wilson, MITRE, USA
    Cornelia Zelinsky-Wibbelt, Hannover, Germany

    INVITED SPEAKERS

    Fabio Pianesi, ITC-IRST, Italy
    Barbara Tversky, Stanford University, USA

    SCHEDULE

     Submissions April 8, 2001
     Notification of Acceptance April 30, 2001
     Deadline for camera-ready May 13, 2001
     versions
     Workshop July 7, 2001

    SUBMISSION FORMAT AND INSTRUCTIONS

    Submissions must be in English, no more than 8 pages long, and in the
    two-column format prescribed by ACL’2001. Please see
    http://acl2001.dfki.de/style/ for the detailed guidelines. However,
    please put the authors’ names, rather than a paper id, since reviewing
    will not be blind.

    Submissions should be sent electronically in either Word, pdf, or
    postscript format (only) no later than April 8, 2001 to:

     Beth Sundheim
     sundheim@spawar.navy.mil



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