Corpora: ACL-2001 Workshop on Collocation Final Call for Papers

From: Priscilla Rasmussen (rasmusse@cs.rutgers.edu)
Date: Tue Mar 27 2001 - 23:08:06 MET DST

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    *** Call for Papers***

    WORKSHOP ON COLLOCATION: Computational Extraction, Analysis and
    Exploitation

    ACL'2001 Conference
    Toulouse, France
    July 7th, 2001

    We invite papers on topics relating to the theme of collocation and
    more particularly their computational extraction, analysis and
    exploitation. This workshop follows the French ATALA workshop on
    collocation which took place in Paris, France on January 2001 and
    seeks to go forward so as to explore the wider perspective of
    computational linguistics.

    The term "collocation" was introduced in the nineteen thirties by
    J. R. Firth, founder member of the British Contextualist school, to
    characterise certain linguistic phenomena of cooccurrence that stem
    principally from the linguistic competence of native speakers (Firth
    1957). By its very nature collocation remains a relatively fuzzy
    concept, the consequence of which being that traditional grammarians
    and semanticists have tended to ignore it, the exception being some
    lexical semanticists as Cruse (1986). The study of collocation is
    above all a practical one aimed at assisting language learners and
    translators in their tasks.

    Essentially idiomatic in nature, collocation defies rigid
    formalisation which explains the existence of different schools of
    thought between those seeking a descriptive contextualised view of
    linguistic phenomena and those who seeks formalised applications for
    translation, lexicography or computational purposes. This has led to a
    variety of approaches based around a general core meaning for the
    phenomenon.

    For several years, NLP has been concerned with collocation largely
    through the following fields:

         Formalisation through specialised formalisms for different NLP
         tasks: dictionary formalism such as lexical function; HPSG, LFG,
         TAG, ... formalisms for analysis or generation.
         
         Extraction from monolingual or bilingual texts or dictionairies
         using either raw statistics or statistics combined with
         linguistic information such as part-of-speech or grammar
         dependancy.
         
         Exploitation through specific NLP systems dedicated to second
         language learning or translation, or for such NLP tasks as
         information retrieval or thematic structuration.

    This workshop aims to guage the extend to which the role of
    collocation as a phenomenon in applied linguistics is now being taken
    into account in formal linguistics and NLP and addresses the following
    topics (not limitative):

         Formal description of collocation through existing or dedicated
         specialised formalisms
         
         New methods adopted for the identification of collocations. This
         would include statistics and also more linguistic oriented
         methods.
         
         NLP systems dedicated to collocation.
         
         Exploitation of collocations for other NLP tasks through
         monolingual or multilingual environments.

    This workshop addresses researchers in all fields of theoretical and
    applied computational linguistics and most particularly those working
    in automatic and assisted machine translation, dictionnary building
    and computationally assisted language teaching as well as those
    concerned with information retrieval and text mining.
      

    ORGANIZERS

         Béatrice Daille IRIN - University of Nantes, France -
                                 daille@irin.univ-nantes.fr
         Geoffrey Williams CRELLIC - University of Bretagne-Sud, France -
                                      Geoffrey.Williams@univ-ubs.fr

    PROGRAM COMMITTEE

         Jeremy Clear, Honorary Research Fellow, University of Birmingham
         Pernilla Danielsson, TELRI
         Chris Gledhill, University of St Andrews
         Syvain Kahane, LaTTiCe/TALaNa
         Marie-Claude L'Homme, University of Montreal
         Julia Pajzs, Hungarian Academy of Science
         Antoinette Renouf, University of Liverpool
         Alain Polguère, OLST - University of Montreal
         Laurent Romary, LORIA
         Dan Tufis, Romanian Academy - RACAI
         Jean Véronis, University of Provence
         Leo Wanner, University of Stuttgart
          

    SCHEDULE

    Workshop paper submissions
         April 8, 2001
    Notification of acceptance
         April 30, 2001
    Deadline for camera-ready papers
         May 13, 2001

    WORKSHOP DATE

    July 7th, 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:
    Béatrice Daille daille@irin.univ-nantes.fr



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