[Corpora-List] HLT/NAACL 2003 Workshop (WS3) Announcement: Research Directions in Dialogue Processing

From: Priscilla Rasmussen (rasmusse@cs.rutgers.edu)
Date: Wed Mar 12 2003 - 00:03:49 MET

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                           HLT-NAACL / NSF WORKSHOP
                  Research Directions in Dialogue Processing
                          May 31st - June 1st, 2003
                          Edmonton, Alberta, CANADA

    Researchers and product engineers have begun to develop increasingly
    sophisticated dialogue capabilities for spoken language systems. Their
    experience is rapidly creating information and artifacts which in turn
    are attracting increasing interest on the part of researchers from a
    variety of disciplines. One reason for this ferment is that groups who
    traditionally have had little opportunity to interact with each other,
    linguists, computational linguists, speech scientists and engineers,
    each approaching dialog from different perspectives, have begun to
    interact on a technical level. In part this is due to the emergence of
    working technologies, such as recognition systems and speech
    synthesizers, that for the first time allow researchers not directly
    familiar with the implementation of component technologies to put
    together systems that converse (however simply) with humans. As a
    result, groups with very different traditions now find themselves
    working on phenomena that are nominally the same. These researchers
    are concerned about making use of linguistically motivated dialogue
    models, the need for well-engineered, practical interfaces for use
    with everyday users, and the availability of corpora that can steer
    new research in this area for both computational linguists and
    engineers.

    These shared concerns present an opportunity to encourage
    cross-fertilization and to transform the study of dialog into a richer
    and more energetic enterprise. In turn, such a transformation will
    increase our scientific understanding of dialog and will hasten the
    creation of techniques and artifacts that significantly impact
    human-computer communication.

    The purpose of this workshop is identify common research concerns and
    to identify paradigms, tools, corpora, evaluation techniques and other
    infrastructure that will promote the scientific study of dialogue.

    Submission of Position Papers

    Contributions are invited from active practitioners in the field of
    dialog processing and can address one of the following topics:

    * acquisition and decoding of signals
    * multi-modal integration
    * language understanding
    * dialog management
    * pragmatics
    * output planning
    * language generation
    * rendering through speech and other modes

    Each position paper may address one or more of the following issues:
    * identify successful research paradigms
    * identify accepted or emerging evaluation techniques
    * identify corpora, both available and desired, that will drive research

    In addition, all papers should discuss methods of sharing resources
    (such as tools and corpora) across communities, for example though the
    adoption or development of standards and through design for
    reusability.

    Submissions

    Position papers should be no longer than 3 pages and should follow the
    HLT/NAACL style (see
    http://www.sims.berkeley.edu/research/conferences/hlt-naacl03/format.html).
    Note that authors should identify themselves (in contrast to the
    instructions for HLT/NAACL papers). To encourage a more productive
    workshop, the organizers may ask groups of several authors to combine
    their thoughts into a single presentation.

    Position papers should be submitted in electronic form (either pdf or
    postscript) to: dialogue2003@cs.cmu.edu

    Deadline for submission: March 21st, 2003

    Proceedings

    Attendees will be invited to submit versions of their papers for
    inclusion in workshop proceedings and to contribute to a summary
    report.

    Organizing Committee
    Alexander I. Rudnicky, Carnegie Mellon University, air@cs.cmu.edu
    Candace L. Sidner, Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories, sidner@merl.com

    Website
    http://www.speech.cs.cmu.edu/hltnaacl2003/



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