LINGUIST List 18.3861
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Fri Dec 21 2007
Calls: Computational Ling/Morocco; Computational Ling/Hungary
Editor for this issue: Ania Kubisz
<ania linguistlist.org>
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Directory
1. Ann
Devitt,
Language Resources and Evaluation Conference
2. Judit
Kuti,
2008 NooJ conference
Message 1: Language Resources and Evaluation Conference
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Date: 20-Dec-2007
From: Ann Devitt <ann.devitt cs.tcd.ie>
Subject: Language Resources and Evaluation Conference
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Full Title: Language Resources and Evaluation Conference Short Title: LREC Date: 26-May-2008 - 01-Jun-2008 Location: Marrakech, Morocco Contact Person: Helene Mazo Meeting Email: lrec lrec-conf.org Web Site: http://www.lrec-conf.org/lrec2008/ Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics Call Deadline: 20-Feb-2008 Meeting Description LREC 2008 - 6th Language Resources and Evaluation Conference Main Conference: 28-30 May 2008 Workshops and Tutorials: 26 - 27 May and 31 May - 1 June 2008 The sixth international conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC) will be organised in 2008 by ELRA in cooperation with a wide range of international associations and organisations. Palais des Congrès Mansour Eddahbi, Marrakech - Morocco Conference web site: http://www.lrec-conf.org/lrec2008/ Call for Papers LREC 2008 Workshop on Sentiment Analysis: Emotion, Metaphor, Ontology and Terminology (EMOT 2008) 27 May, 2008, Marrakech, Morocco https://www.cs.tcd.ie/Khurshid.Ahmad/lrec-emot08.html Submission deadline: 20 February 2008 Workshop Topics Sentiment analysis systems seek to extract emotions and feelings expressed about people, organisations, nation states, goods and services, in free natural language texts. This interdisciplinary workshop will address three related topics in this area: (a) how metaphor and sentiment interact in everyday communication; (b) language/conceptual resources properties to support sentiment analysis (c) evaluation of sentiment analysis programs and evaluation methodologies. There will be one keynote lecture on each of the three topics followed by the presentation of papers related to each of the three topics. Workshop Aims This workshop will deal with the recent advances in the processing of ''sentiment'' in arbitrary collections of text. Sentiment can be expressed about works of art and literature, about the state of financial markets, about liking and disliking individuals, organisations, ideologies, and consumer goods. It is necessary to examine what aspects of emotional experience sentiment analysis aims to capture, how and in what way this may be evaluated. This workshop focuses on three strands of research which will serve to enhance the development of automated sentiment analysis systems of free text for real world applications. Firstly, in psychology and computational linguistics, the notions of emotion and metaphor interact in a number of complex ways. It has been argued that conceptual metaphors underlie human understanding and processing of emotion. In addition, it can be argued that the expression of sentiment and its interpretation can rely critically on how a speaker or writer uses metaphor. Therefore, an understanding of how emotion is expressed and perceived in language is not complete without addressing the role of figurative language and metaphor as basic scaffolding or tool for modulating affective text content. Secondly, to date, sentiment analysis typically deals with a specific domain of 'ideal objects'. In order to build a sentiment analysis system, one has to understand 'what there is' in a given domain, i.e. the ontology of the domain. In this context, is it possible to conceive of generic sentiment analysis? Practitioners in this area need to examine the requirements and challenges of an approach that could cross boundaries of domain or time or even language where different communities of use, languages or cultures may express or even experience sentiments in different ways. Finally, work in sentiment analysis may be regarded as work in intelligent information retrieval and ''success'' is evaluated in terms of accuracy in identifying the affective content of information segments. Yet sentiment analysis has the potential to have a powerful impact in other domains that require input about emotional context. Researchers in Human-Computer Interaction, Affective Computing, Lexicography and Terminography, may become end-users of work in sentiment analysis and sentiment analysis folks may have much to learn from how a machine artificially ''endowed'' with emotions/sentiments behaves. It may become feasible to evaluate sentiment analysis systems in terms of the performance of such applications. An examination of alternative end-user systems and evaluation mechanisms can only serve to enrich the field of sentiment analysis and present new challenges for researchers to address. Submissions Authors are invited to submit full papers on original, unpublished work in the topic area of this workshop. Submissions should should not exceed 8 pages and should be typeset using a font size of 11 points. (Style files will be made available by LREC for the camera-ready versions of accepted papers.) The reviewing of the papers will be blind and the papers should not include the authors' names and affiliations. Each submission will be reviewed by at least two members of the program committee. Accepted papers will be published in the workshop proceedings. Springer has expressed an interest in publishing selected papers from the workshop in one of its series, we are currently in discussions and will confirm details at a later date. Papers should be submitted electronically, no later than February 20, 2008. The only accepted format for submitted papers is Adobe PDF. Details about the submission procedure will be published on the workshop webpage (https://www.cs.tcd.ie/Khurshid.Ahmad/lrec-emot08.html) closer to the time. Important Dates 20 February - Deadline for workshop papers 21 March - Notification of acceptance 4 April - Camera-ready papers due 27 May - Workshop held at LREC 2008 Programme Committee Khurshid Ahmad, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland (Workshop Chair) Gerhard Budin, Zentrum für Translationswissenschaft, Universität Wien, Austria Ann Devitt, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland, Sam Glucksberg, Princeton University, USA Gerhard Heyer, Institut für Informatik, Universität Leipzig, Germany Maria Teresa Musacchio, Università di Padova, Italy Margaret Rogers, University of Surrey, U.K. Carl Vogel, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland Yorick Wilks, University of Sheffield, U.K. Further Information Workshop web page: https://www.cs.tcd.ie/Khurshid.Ahmad/lrec-emot08.html LREC 2008 web page: http://www.lrec-conf.org/lrec2008/
Message 2: 2008 NooJ conference
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Date: 20-Dec-2007
From: Judit Kuti <nooj08 nytud.hu>
Subject: 2008 NooJ conference
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Full Title: 2008 NooJ conference Short Title: NooJ '08 Date: 08-Jun-2008 - 10-Jun-2008 Location: Budapest, Hungary Contact Person: Judit Kuti Meeting Email: nooj08 [at] nytud.hu Web Site: http://www.nytud.hu/nooj08 Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics Call Deadline: 07-Mar-2008 Meeting Description 2008 NooJ Conference Budapest, Hungary 8-10 June, 2008 The Research Institute for Linguistics of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (HAS), LAboratoire de SEmioLinguistique, Didactique et Informatique (LASELDI, Univ. de Franche-Comté) and Maison des Sciences de l'Homme Claude Ledoux, France, are pleased to announce the 2008 NooJ Conference to be held in Budapest, Hungary, 8-10 June, 2008. NooJ is a freeware, linguistic engineering development environment used to formalize various types of textual phenomena (orthography, lexical and productive morphology, local, structural and transformational syntax) using a large gamut of computational devices (from Finite-State Automata to Augmented Recursive Transition Networks). NooJ includes tools to construct, test, debug, maintain and accumulate large sets linguistic resources, and can apply them to large texts. NooJ is used as a linguistic engineering development platform, a corpus processor, an information extraction system, a terminological extractor, a Machine Translation development tool as well as to teach linguistics and computational linguistics. To learn more about NooJ, download the software, linguistic resources, manual, tutorials and reference papers: www.nooj4nlp.net. This conference will hopefully provide an opportunity for NooJ users, as well as other researchers interested in corpus linguistics, to meet and to exchange their experience of development, research or teaching. It will also be the occasion to present and discover the recent developments of NooJ (v2.0). To submit a paper, please send a one-page abstract before March 7, 2008 to nooj08 at nytud.hu. The abstract, in French or in English, should contain the title of the article, the name, institution, surface mail and electronic address of each co-author. All papers will be reviewed by the Scientific Committee. Authors will be notified whether their papers are accepted or rejected by 30 April, 2008 the latest. The timeslot is 30 minutes for presentations, including 5 minutes for discussions. Further information on the conference: www.nytud.hu/nooj08. Scientific Committee - Abdelmajid Ben Hamadou (ISIM-Sfax, Tunisia) - Xavier Blanco Escoda (Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain) - Krzysztof Bogacki (University of Warsaw, Poland) - Gisele Chevalier (Université de Moncton, Canada) - János Csirik (Department of Computer Algorithms and Artificial Intelligence, University of Szeged, Hungary) - Stefan Darmoni (CHU de Rouen, France) - Anaid Donabédian (INALCO, France) - Annibale Elia (Université of Salerne, Italy) - Zoe Gavriilidou (Democritus University of Thrace, Greece) - Ferenc Kiefer (Academician, Research Institute for Linguistics of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary) - Denis Le Pesant (Université Paris 10, France) - Mireille Piot (Université Grenoble 3, France) - Peter A. Machonis (Florida International University, USA) - Belinda Maia (University of Porto, Portugal) - Fabienne Marc (INALCO, France) - Elisabeth Métais (CNAM of Paris, France) - Odile Piton (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, France) - Philippe Schepens (Université de Franche-Comté, France) - Max Silberztein (Université de Franche-Comté, France) - Tamás Váradi (Research Institute for Linguistics of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary) - Tibor Vámos (Academician, Computer and Automation Research Institute of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary) - Dusko Vitas (University of Belgrade, Serbia) Organising institutions: - Research Institute for Linguistics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences - LAboratoire de SEmioLinguistique, Didactique et Informatique (LASELDI, Univ. de Franche-Comté), France - Maison des Sciences de l'Homme Claude Ledoux, France NooJ tutorials (June 8) - Beginners' Tutorial, 20 persons maximum - Advanced Tutorial, 20 persons maximum Registration fee: The registration fee is 50EUR / 13.000HUF for academic researchers, 25EUR / 6.500HUF for students and 75EUR / 19.000HUF for others. Payment can be made either - in EUR by bank transfer, to the account nr.: HU56 - 10004885-1002010-02006332 EURO or - in HUF (cash) on-site, on the first day of the conference. An acknowledgement of receipt will be issued by the Hungarian Academy of Sciences on request. Contact: Judit Kuti (local organising committee) nooj08 at nytud.hu
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