[Corpora-List] ACL 2004 Workshop on Multiword Expressions: Integrating Processing

From: bond@cslab.kecl.ntt.co.jp
Date: Wed Mar 31 2004 - 13:28:35 MET DST

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    ***************************************************************
    ACL-2004 Workshop on

    Multiword Expressions: Integrating Processing

    26th July 2004, Barcelona, Spain

    ***************************************************************

    FINAL CALL FOR PAPERS and DEADLINE EXTENSION :

    Submission deadline extended to !! April 12, 2004 !!

    ***************************************************************

    WEBSITES

    Workshop website:
    <http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/users/alk23/mwe04/mwe.html>

    ACL website:
    <http://www.acl2004.org/>

    WORKSHOP DESCRIPTION

    In recent years, there has been a growing awareness in the NLP community of
    the problems that Multiword Expressions (MWEs) pose and the need for their
    robust handling.

    MWEs include a large range of linguistic phenomena, such as phrasal
    verbs (e.g. "add up"), nominal compounds (e.g. "telephone box"), and
    institutionalized phrases (e.g. "salt and pepper"). These expressions,
    which can be syntactically and/or semantically idiosyncratic in nature,
    are used frequently in everyday language, usually to express precisely
    ideas and concepts that cannot be compressed into a single word.
    Most real-world applications tend to ignore MWEs or address them simply
    by listing. However, it is clear that successful applications will need to
    be able to identify and treat them appropriately. This particularly applies
    to the many applications which require some degree of semantic
    interpretation (e.g. machine translation, question-answering, summarisation,
    generation) and require tasks such as parsing and word sense disambiguation.

    A considerable amount of research has lately been conducted in this area,
    some within large research projects dedicated to MWEs.
    In this context, a successful workshop on MWEs was held at ACL 2003
    (<http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/users/alk23/mwe/mwe.html>), with papers
    presenting a cross section of research on MWEs. There is some research
    on MWEs in general. Some is very computational, examining detection and
    extraction using a variety of methods. Some is more linguistic, focusing on
    classification of the various types. There is also a lot of research on
    particular subtypes of MWEs, especially English phrasal verbs.
    In this workshop the focus is on papers that integrate analysis,
    acquisition and treatment of various kinds of multiword expressions
    (MWEs) in NLP. For example,

    (1) research that combines a linguistic analysis with a method of
    automatically acquiring the classes described
    (2) work that combines the computational treatment of a class of MWEs
    with a solid linguistic analysis
    (3) research that extracts MWEs and either classifies them or uses them
    in some task.

    These combinations of research will help to bridge the gap between the needs
    of NLP and the descriptive tradition of linguistics.

    TARGET AUDIENCE

    The workshop will be of interest to anyone working on MWEs, e.g. in the
    areas of computational grammars, computational lexicography, automatic
    lexical acquisition, machine translation, information retrieval, text
    mining, and computer-assisted language teaching and learning. The objective
    is to summarise what has been achieved in the area, to establish common
    themes between different approaches, and to discuss future trends.

    AREAS OF INTEREST

    Papers are invited on, but not limited to, the following topics:

    * Theoretical research on MWEs, including corpus based analysis
    * MWE taxonomies, classifications and databases
    * Cross-lingual analysis of MWE types, use, and behaviour
    * Methods for identification and extraction of MWEs
    (machine learning, statistical, example- or rule-based, or hybrid)
    * Evaluation of MWE extraction methods
    * Methods for determining the compositionality of MWEs
    * Integration of MWE data into grammars and NLP applications
    (e.g. machine translation and generation)

    Papers can cover one or more of these areas, but research that combines
    different topics is especially encouraged.

    SUBMISSION INFORMATION

    Papers should be submitted electronically in Postscript or PDF format
    to: mwe-acl04@cl.cam.ac.uk . Submissions should conform to the
            two-column format of ACL proceedings and should not exceed eight (8)
    pages, including references. We strongly recommend the use of ACL-2004 style
    files, also available from the ACL-2004 website.

    The subject line of the submission email should be "ACL2004 WORKSHOP
    PAPER SUBMISSION". As reviewing will be blind, the body of the paper
    should not include the names or affiliations of the authors. The
    following identification information should be sent in a separate
    email with the subject line "ACL2004 WORKSHOP ID PAGE":

    Title: title of paper
    Authors: list of all authors
    Keywords: up to five topic keywords
    Contact author: email address of author of record (for correspondence)
    Abstract: abstract of paper (not more than 10 lines)

    Notification of receipt will be emailed to the contact author.

    IMPORTANT DATES

    Submission deadline EXTENDED to: April 12, 2004
    Acceptance notification: May 7, 2004
    Final version deadline: May 17, 2004
    Workshop date: July 26, 2004

    WORKSHOP CHAIRS

    Takaaki Tanaka (NTT Communication Science Laboratories, Japan)
    Aline Villavicencio (University of Cambridge, UK)
    Francis Bond (NTT Communication Science Laboratories, Japan)
    Anna Korhonen (University of Cambridge, UK)

    PROGRAM COMMITTEE

    Timothy Baldwin (Stanford University, USA)
    Colin Bannard (University of Edinburgh, UK)
    Ann Copestake (University of Cambridge, UK)
    Gael Dias (Beira Interior University, Portugal)
    James Dowdall (University of Zurich, Switzerland)
    Dan Flickinger (Stanford University, USA)
    Matthew Hurst (Intelliseek, USA)
    Stephan Oepen (Stanford University, USA; University of Oslo, Norway)
    Kyonghee Paik (ATR Spoken Language Translation Research Laboratories, Japan)
    Scott Piao (University of Lancaster, UK)
    Beata Trawinski (University of Tuebningen, Germany)
    Kiyoko Uchiyama (Keio University, Japan)

    REGISTRATION

    Workshop registration information will be posted at a later date. The
    registration fee will include attendance at the workshop and a copy of
    workshop proceedings.



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