[Corpora-List] 2nd CfP: EACL 2014 Workshop on Continuous Vector Space Models and their Compositionality

Alexandre Allauzen allauzen at limsi.fr
Wed Dec 11 11:35:49 UTC 2013


Second Call for Papers

(Apologies for multiple postings)

**************************************************************************
Workshop on Continuous Vector Space Models and their Compositionality
(2nd edition)

Co-located with EACL 2014, Gothenburg, Sweden

April 27, 2014

Submission deadline: January 23, 2014

https://sites.google.com/site/cvscworkshop2014

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


INVITED SPEAKERS

The workshop will showcase presentations from two invited speakers :
Geoffrey Zweig (Microsoft Research) and Ivan Titov (University of 
Amsterdam).


AIMS AND SCOPE

In recent years, there has been a growing interest in algorithms that 
learn and use continuous representations for words, phrases, or 
documents in many natural language processing applications. Among many 
others, influential proposals that illustrate this trend include latent 
Dirichlet allocation, neural network based language models and spectral 
methods. These approaches are motivated by improving the generalization 
power of the discrete standard models, by dealing with the data sparsity 
issue and by efficiently handling a wide context.  Despite the success 
of single word vector space models, they are limited since they do not 
capture compositionality. This prevents them from gaining a deeper 
understanding of the semantics of longer phrases or sentences.


With the growing popularity of these neural and probabilistic methods of 
language processing, the scope of this second workshop is extended to 
theoretical and conceptual questions regarding:

* their relation to unsupervised distributional representations,

* the encompassing of the compositional aspects of formal models of
   semantics,

* the role of linguistic theory in the design and development of these
   methods.


Some such pertinent questions include: Should phrase representations and 
word representations be of the same sort? Could different linguistic 
levels require different modeling approaches? Is compositionality 
determined by syntax, and if so, how do we learn/define it? Should word 
representations be fixed and obtained distributionally, or should the 
encoding be variable?  Should word representations be task-specific, or 
should they be general?

In this workshop, we invite submissions of papers on continuous vector 
space models for natural language processing. Topics of interest 
include, but are not limited to:

* learning algorithms for continuous vector space models,

* their compositionality,

* their use in NLP applications,

* spectral learning for NLP,

* neural networks for NLP,

* phrase, sentence, and document-level distributional representations,

* tensor models,

* distributed semantic representations,

* the role of syntax in compositional models,

* formal and distributional semantic models.


SUBMISSION INFORMATION

Authors should submit a full paper of up to 8 pages in electronic, PDF
format, with up to 2 additional pages for references. The reported
research should be substantially original. The papers will be presented
orally or as posters. All submissions must be in PDF format and must
follow the EACL 2014 formatting requirements
(http://www.eacl2014.org/files/eacl-2014-styles.zip ). Reviewing will be
double-blind, and thus no author information should be included in the
papers; self-reference should be avoided as well.  Submissions must be
made through the Softconf website set up for this workshop:

https://www.softconf.com/eacl2014/CVSC/


Accepted papers will appear in the workshop proceedings, where no
distinction will be made between papers presented orally or as posters.


IMPORTANT DATES

23 January 2014      : Submission deadline
20 February 2014     : Notification of acceptance
3 March 2014         : Camera-ready deadline
27 April 2014        : Workshop


ORGANIZERS

Alexandre Allauzen (LIMSI-CNRS/Université Paris-Sud, France)
Raffaella Bernardi (University of Trento, Italy)
Edward Grefenstette (University of Oxford, UK)
Hugo Larochelle (Université de de Sherbrooke, Canada)
Christopher Manning (Stanford University, USA)
Scott Wen-tau Yih (Microsoft Research, USA)


PROGRAM COMMITTEE

Nicholas Asher (IRIT-Toulouse)
Marco Baroni (University of Trento)
Yoshua Bengio (Université de Montréal)
Gemma Boleda (University of Texas)
Antoine Bordes (Université Technologique de Compiègne)
Johan Bos (University of Groningen)
Léon Bottou (Microsoft Research)
Xavier Carreras (Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya)
Lucas Champollion (New-York University)
Stephen Clark (University of Cambridge)
Shay Cohen (Columbia University)
Ido Dagan (Bar Ilan University)
Ronan Collobert (IDIAP Research Institute, Switzerland)
Pino Di Fabbrizio (Amazon)
Georgiana Dinu (University of Trento)
Kevin Duh (Nara Institute of Science and Technology)
Dean Foster (University of Pennsylvania)
Alessandro Lenci (University of Pisa)
Louise McNally (Universitat Pompeu Fabra)
Fabio Massimo Zanzotto (Università degli Studi di Roma)
Mirella Lapata (University of Edinburgh)
Andriy Mnih (Gatsby Computational Neuroscience Unit)
Larry Moss (Indiana University)
Diarmuid Ó Seaghdha (University of Cambridge)
Sebastian Pado (Universität Stuttgart)
Martha Palmer (University of Colorado)
John Platt (Microsoft Research)
Maarten de Rijke (University of Amsterdam)
Mehrnoosh Sadrzadeh (University of London)
Mark Steedman (University of Edinburgh)
Chung-chieh Shan (Indiana University)
Peter Turney (NRC)
Jason Weston (Google)
Guillaume Wisniewski (LIMSI-CNRS/Université Paris-Sud)


_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE from this page: http://mailman.uib.no/options/corpora
Corpora mailing list
Corpora at uib.no
http://mailman.uib.no/listinfo/corpora



More information about the Corpora mailing list