[HPSG-L] TLT16 - Last Call for Papers

Zdenka Uresova uresova at ufal.mff.cuni.cz
Fri Nov 3 12:52:36 UTC 2017


***** TLT16: DEADLINE EXTENSION AND FINAL REMINDER *****

16th International Workshop on Treebanks and Linguistic Theories

======= http://ufal.mff.cuni.cz/tlt16 ======

******* Deadline extended to Tuesday, Nov. 14 *********

Based on external suggestions to extend the deadline due to deadline 
conflicts with various events, we have decided to extend the deadline 
for TLT'16 to November 14, 2017.

Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic

January 23-24, 2018

TLT serves as a venue for new and ongoing research on the topic of 
linguistics and treebanks. The 16th edition of TLT will, for the second 
time, take place in Prague, Czech Republic, at Charles University in the 
heart of the old city, on 23-24 January 2018.

For over 15 years now, TLT has served as a venue for new and ongoing 
high-quality work related to syntactically-annotated corpora, i.e., 
treebanks; with a focus on all the aspects of treebanking - descriptive, 
theoretical, formal and computational - but also going beyond treebanks, 
including other levels of annotation such as frame semantics and similar 
formalisms, coreference, discourse, named entities or events, to name 
only a few.

Submissions are invited for papers, posters and demonstrations which 
present research on treebanks and their intersection with linguistics, 
natural language processing and related fields.

TLT16 website: http://ufal.mff.cuni.cz/tlt16

The TLT16 conference is collocated with a Workshop on Data Provenance 
(Jan. 22, organized by Miriam Butt of Konstanz Univ., Germany) and 
immediately followed by the CDH workshop, which takes place in Vienna, 
Austria on January 25-26, 2018.

INVITED SPEAKERS

- Marie Candito, Université Paris Diderot - INRIA, France
- Lilja Ovrelid, University of Oslo, Norway

MOTIVATION AND AIMS

Treebanks have proved to be crucial resources for very important NLP 
applications, such as machine translation and information extraction, as 
well as supporting resources for various NLP tasks, such as high-quality 
parsing and POS tagging.

More recent trends in treebank-related research have focused on a 
variety of initiatives, such as annotating deep syntactic, semantic, and 
syntactic-semantic interface information; (semi)-automatic conversion of 
existing treebanks into deeper linguistic formats; multilingual and 
cross-lingual treebanking, including 'language-universal' treebanking; 
typology and its relation to treebanking; enriching treebanks with 
additional layers of linguistic annotation as well as incorporating 
world knowledge; dynamic treebanking involving a close connection 
between grammar-based parsing and manual annotation; designing web 
services for observing and exploiting theoretically diverse treebanks; 
and mapping syntactic and semantic knowledge to Linked Open Data (LOD) 
information.

TOPICS

TLT16 invites the submission of papers, posters and software 
demonstrations on original and unpublished research on the following 
topics, including, but not limited to:

- Design principles and annotation schemes for treebanks
- The use of treebanks in acquiring linguistic knowledge
- The use of treebanks for NLP applications
- The role of linguistic theories in treebank development
- Treebanks as a knowledge source for linguistic research
- Treebank annotation beyond syntax: semantics, pragmatics and discourse
- Relation of treebanks and lexical resources
- Evaluation and quality control of treebanks
- Tools for creation and management of treebanks
- Treebanks for lesser-resourced languages
- Theories, schemas and applications for parallel treebanks
- Standards for treebanks
- (Semi-)automatic methods for creating large treebanks
- Mapping of treebanks to Linked Open Data resources
- Domain-specific treebanks
- The future of treebanks and treebanking
- Multi-word expressions in treebanks
- Language-universal annotation for treebanks and its relation to 
language-specific annotation
- Relation of treebanking to linguistic typology

SPECIAL TOPIC

This year, we specifically invite papers on all aspects of the relation 
of linguistically motivated complex annotation, such as treebanking, and 
deep learning methods. Topics of such papers may include, but are not 
limited to:
- a comparison of application performance using a linguistic 
representation vs. end-to-end Deep Neural Network system, or any 
particular aspects of it (e.g., differences in recall vs. precision)
- analysis of errors made by a deep-learning system vs. a system using 
linguistic features or representation
- approaches to "soften" categorical annotation usually present in 
treebanks by using distributional methods
- specific aspects of deep learning when applied to complex treebanks
- advantages or disadvantages of deep learning from treebanks in a 
multilingual setting.

INSTRUCTIONS FOR AUTHORS

The program for TLT16 will consist of full papers, posters and software 
demonstrations. This year, we ask authors not to anonymize their 
submissions; we believe that full anonymity is difficult to achieve, 
since many papers now appear as preprints on the web and it is easy to 
find authors; for demonstrations, it is almost impossible in any case 
due to the use of system names, references to previous versions etc. 
Submissions must be written in English, and conform to the TLT16 style 
files available at http://ufal.mff.cuni.cz/tlt16/.

All submissions should be full-length papers of up to 7 pages plus 
unlimited references. It is assumed that system demonstration papers 
might be shorter; in any case, use an appropriate length given what is 
the idea you are conveying in your contribution and the amount of 
technical details and/or examples you want to put in. Accepted final 
papers will get an extra page (8 pages total) plus unlimited number of 
pages for references and up to 4 pages for an optional appendix which 
could serve to publish algorithms, code snippets and/or additional examples.

The organizers will work with the ACL Anthology to list the TLT 
proceedings there. Authors of outstanding papers as identified by the PC 
members will be invited to submit an extended version to The Prague 
Bulletin of Mathematical Linguistics (https://ufal.mff.cuni.cz/pbml), an 
ERIH-Plus listed journal published online by deGruyter in cooperation 
with Charles University.

Please upload your submissions via EasyChair: 
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=tlt16

IMPORTANT DATES:

- 23 June 2017: Submission system open
- 14 November 2017: Deadline for submissions, registration open
- 26 November 2017: Notification of acceptance
- 12 December 2017: Final papers due
- 23-24 January 2018: The conference


PROGRAM COMMITTEE CHAIRS

- Jan Hajic (Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic)
- Sandra Kuebler (Indiana University, USA)
- Stephan Oepen (University of Oslo, Norway)
- Markus Dickinson (Indiana University, USA)

PROGRAM COMMITTEE

Patricia Amaral (Indiana University, Bloomington, USA)
Emily Bender (University of Washington, Seattle, USA)
Eckhard Bick (University of Southern Denmark, Denmark)
Ann Bies (Linguistic Data Consortium, Univ. of Pennsylvania, USA)
Gosse Bouma (University of Groningen, The Netherlands)
Miriam Butt (University of Konstanz, Germany)
Jinho Choi (Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA)
Silvie Cinkova (Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic)
Koenraad De Smedt (Bergen University, Norway)
Tomaz Erjavec (Institut Jozef Stefan, Ljubljana, Slovenia)
Filip Ginter (Turku University, Finland)
Memduh Gokirmak (Instanbul University, Turkey)
Eva Hajicova (Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic)
Dag Haug (University of Oslo, Norway)
Barbora Hladka (Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic)
Lori Levin (Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA)
Teresa Lynn (Dublin City University, Ireland)
Marie-Catherine de Marneffe (Ohio State University, Columbus, USA)
Adam Meyers (New York University, New York, USA)
Emad Mohamed (Indiana University, Bloomington, USA)
Jiri Mirovsky (Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic)
Kaili Muurisep (University of Tartu, Estonia)
Joakim Nivre (Uppsala University, Sweden)
Petya Osenova (Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia, Bulgaria)
Agnieszka Patejuk (Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland)
Tatjana Scheffler (University of Potsdam, Germany)
Olga Scrivner (University of Indiana, Bloomington, USA)
Djame Seddah (Paris-Sorbonne University, France)
Milan Straka (Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic)
Michael White (Ohio State University, Columbus, USA)
Nianwen Xue (Brandeis University, Waltham, USA)
Daniel Zeman (Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic)
Heike Zinsmeister (University of Hamburg, Germany)

LOCAL ORGANIZING COMMITTEE

- Jan Hajic (Charles University, Czech Republic)
- Jiri Balhar (Charles University, Czech Republic)
- Eduard Bejcek (Charles University, Czech Republic)
- Katerina Bryanova (Charles University, Czech Republic)
- Jan Ptacek (Charles University, Czech Republic)
- Zdenka Uresova (Charles University, Czech Republic)






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