[Corpora-List] EACL-03 Workshop Call for Papers: Dialogue Systems

From: Roberta Catizone (R.Catizone@dcs.shef.ac.uk)
Date: Wed Nov 13 2002 - 14:25:27 MET

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    ____________________________________________________________________________

                              EACL-03 Workshop on

         Dialogue Systems: interaction, adaptation and styles of management

                                Budapest, Hungary, April 13-14 2003
              (Just preceding the 11th Conference of the European Chapter
                      of the Association for Computational Linguistics)

    _____________________________________________________________________________

    Introduction

    The two-day workshop will focus on adaptation and learning in
    intelligent interactive systems and especially on the new and
    interdisciplinary techniques and applications that are needed to
    realize such systems. The question of dialogue management style has
    become an important issue in the field, and the workshop
    aims at further discussion on how dialogue models in conversational
    systems should be developed: can dialogue management benefit from a
    learning strategy and, if so, will the systems be language
    independent.

    As we move towards systems that are more plausibly conversational in
    nature we are faced with questions and issues that concern how to
    manage a dialogue. The last 30 years has seen a range of approaches to
    dialogue systems from the simplicity of Eliza (Weizenbaum 1966)
    ---originally a network but which we would probably now manage
    with a few simple finite state rules--- on up to high
    functionality multi-modal systems. As we look at the design of
    dialogue systems over many years, we can ask if the underlying
    components are now basically agreed and the rest is notational
    variant or taste in logic? If we are in that state, it may
    be only a sign of maturity, as in Information Extraction (IE) when
    Hobbs argued successfully about 1992 that all IE systems were then
    basically isomorphic.

    On one hand, the notions of adaptation and learning have become
    important issues when working with spoken interactive systems, and on
    the other hand, machine learning research has matured so as to provide
    tools and techniques for system designers and developers to build
    adaptive and learning systems. The goal of the workshop is to provide
    a forum for discussing how these aspects can be combined in spoken
    dialogue systems, addressing especially such questions as what kind of
    adaptation and learning is necessary, desirable, and possible for
    speech interface systems, and how the new learning techniques can help
    in achieving these goals. An important issue is also to clarify the
    notion of user-centered design when building flexible and adaptive
    systems: as it is not only the user who should adapt to the (limits
    of the) system properties, the question that system builders and
    designers must address is where and when the system needs to adapt to
    the user. User modelling is thus an essential part of interaction
    management in intelligent systems, and one of the workshop aims is to
    investigate the limits and relation of the user models to interaction
    models in general. Furthermore, there are various types of
    architectures and frameworks that have been proposed to accommodate
    adaptation and learning aspects into spoken language interfaces, and
    the workshop aims to share experience, as well as successful and
    unsuccessful solutions.

    The workshop will address the unique requirements that the adaptive
    and learning view-points pose for dialogue research, interface design
    and system development. It offers a platform for discussion of
    Dialogue Systems - a topic that is becoming increasingly prominent in
    the field of Natural Language Processing, and in particular, it will
    focus on two related issues:

    1) The adaptation and learning in intelligent interactive systems and
    the techniques and applications that are needed to realize such
    systems.

    2) The approaches to Dialogue Management.
    In particular, whether Dialogue Management Systems (DMS) are
    now generic and if not whether there are real differences in approach.

    Topics of Interest

    The workshop will bring together researchers and system developers who
    share an interest in intelligent spoken dialogue systems. The target
    audience consists of colleagues who work on theoretical and practical
    issues concerning adaptation and learning in dialogue systems, and who
    wish to discuss and exchange ideas from different viewpoints. We also
    expect the workshop to be of interest to interface designers who want
    to expand their expertise to specific system internal modelling
    issues, as well as to those dialogue researchers who are interested in
    exploring the possibilities of integrating research into larger
    systems.

    We solicit papers from a number of research areas, including but not
    limited to:

    - How can adaptive techniques be used in spoken dialogue systems?
    - How effective is learning for Dialogue systems?
    - What kind of limitations and challenges are there for applying machine

      learning research in practical dialogue systems?
    - Is Dialogue Management language independent?
    - What kind of representations and type of information are necessary for

      adaptation?
    - What kind of requirements are there for the architecture and general
      development framework of adaptive systems?
    - Can we always effectively distinguish the roles of dialogue management

      components and general architectures for dialogue and language
    processing?
    - Are all dialogue systems the same underneath the surface or are there
      fundamental differences to approaching Dialogue Management?
    - Are there any specific requirements for adaptation in mobile
      environment?
    - What is the role of user modelling and integration of user models in
      dialogue systems?
    - What are future challenges for adaptive and learning systems?

    Workshop Format

    The 2-day workshop will include two thematic sessions that address the
    two main topics of the workshop. Both sessions will combine long and
    short presentations, demo sessions and extended discussions, and
    feature a few plenary presentations on central topics.

    The following thematic sessions are planned:
            Adaptation and learning in spoken dialogue systems
            Styles of dialogue management: are they really different?

    Submission of Papers and Abstracts

    The program committee welcomes the submission of papers describing
    both theoretical contributions and project implementations. We
    especially encourage papers that concern innovative frameworks and
    offer new, even controversial view-points for developing interactive
    systems that offer natural and rich interaction in an enjoyable and
    satisfactory manner.

    The papers must be no longer than 8 pages, including title page,
    examples, references, etc. In addition to this, two additional pages
    are allowed as an appendix which may include extended example
    discourses or dialogues, algorithms, graphical representations, etc.

    The papers should be sent electronically to the e-mail address:
    eacl-w6@dcs.shef.ac.uk

    The paper format is the same as used in EACL submission. Style files
    are available at
    http://ufal.ms.mff.cuni.cz/~hajic/eacl03/submission.html
    Papers must be submitted in pdf format.

    The title page (no separate title page is needed) should include the
    following information:

               Title:
               Authors' names, affiliations, and email addresses;
               Preferred thematic session, if any.
               Abstract (short summary up to 5 lines);

    Important Dates

     Submission January 7, 2003
     Notification January 28, 2003
     Camera-ready papers February 13, 2003
     Workshop April 13-14 2003

    Websites

    Workshop website: http://www.dcs.shef.ac.uk/~roberta/eacl-W06.html

    EACL website: http://www.conferences.hu/EACL03/start.htm

    Workshop Publications

    All accepted papers will be published in the workshop proceedings.

    Organising committee

    Kristiina Jokinen (co-chair)
            University of Art and Design Helsinki
            Media Lab
            Hämeentie 135 C
            00560 Helsinki Finland
            email: kjokinen@uiah.fi

    Yorick Wilks (co-chair)
            University of Sheffield
            Computer Science Dept.
            Regent Court
            Sheffield S1 4DP
            UK
            email: yorick@dcs.shef.ac.uk

    Björn Gambäck
            SICS, Swedish Institute of Computer Science AB
            Box 1263
            SE - 164 29 Kista, Sweden
            email: gamback@sics.se

    Bill Black
            UMIST
            Computation Department
            P.O. Box 88
            Sackville Street
            Manchester M60 1QD
            UK
            email: wjb@co.umist.ac.uk

    Roberta Catizone
           University of Sheffield
           Computer Science Dept.
           Regent Court
           Sheffield S1 4DP
           UK
           email: R.Catizone@dcs.shef.ac.uk

    Programme Committee

    Jan Alexandersson, DFKI, Germany
    Peter Boda, Nokia Research Center, Finland
    Rolf Carlson, KTH, Sweden
    Morena Danieli, Loquendo, Italy
    Laila Dybkjaer, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark
    Wolfgang Minker, Daimler-Chrysler Research, Germany
    Arne Jonsson, University of Linkoping, Sweden
    Scott McGlashan, Pipebeach, Sweden
    Johanna Moore, University of Edinburgh, UK
    Allan Ramsay, UMIST UK
    Norbert Reithinger, DFKI, Germany
    Andrea Setzer, University of Sheffield, UK
    Alistair Sutcliffe, UMIST, UK
    Markku Turunen University of Tampere, Finland
    Tom Wachtel, Independent Consultant, Italy/UK
    Ingrid Zukerman, Monash University, Australia



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