11.2664, Calls: NLP Applications, Computational Linguistics

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LINGUIST List:  Vol-11-2664. Fri Dec 8 2000. ISSN: 1068-4875.

Subject: 11.2664, Calls: NLP Applications, Computational Linguistics

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            Helen Dry, Eastern Michigan U. <hdry at linguistlist.org>
            Andrew Carnie, U. of Arizona <carnie at linguistlist.org>

Reviews: Andrew Carnie: U. of Arizona <carnie at linguistlist.org>

Editors: Karen Milligan, Wayne State U. <karen at linguistlist.org>
         Michael Appleby, E. Michigan U. <michael at linguistlist.org>
         Rob Beltz, E. Michigan U. <rob at linguistlist.org>
         Lydia Grebenyova, E. Michigan U. <lydia at linguistlist.org>
         Jody Huellmantel, Wayne State U. <jody at linguistlist.org>
         Marie Klopfenstein, Wayne State U. <marie at linguistlist.org>
	 Naomi Ogasawara, E. Michigan U. <naomi at linguistlist.org>
	 James Yuells, Wayne State U. <james at linguistlist.org>
         Ljuba Veselinova, Stockholm U. <ljuba at linguistlist.org>

Software: John Remmers, E. Michigan U. <remmers at emunix.emich.edu>
          Gayathri Sriram, E. Michigan U. <gayatri at linguistlist.org>

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=================================Directory=================================

1)
Date:  Wed, 6 Dec 2000 14:57:45 EST
From:  Priscilla Rasmussen <rasmusse at cs.rutgers.edu>
Subject:  NAACL-2001 - WordNet-Extensions and NLP Applications

2)
Date:  Thu, 7 Dec 2000 14:54:56 EST
From:  Priscilla Rasmussen <rasmusse at cs.rutgers.edu>
Subject:  ACL-2001 - Computational Linguistics

-------------------------------- Message 1 -------------------------------

Date:  Wed, 6 Dec 2000 14:57:45 EST
From:  Priscilla Rasmussen <rasmusse at cs.rutgers.edu>
Subject:  NAACL-2001 - WordNet-Extensions and NLP Applications


________________________________________________________________

		NAACL 2001 Workshop on

	WordNet - Extensions and NLP Applications

		June 3 or 4, 2001
	
	   Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

	http://www.seas.smu.edu/~moldovan/wn-workshop


I. PROGRAM COMMITTEE (Confirmed so far)
	
          Martin Chodorow (Hunter College of CUNY)
          Ken Haase (MIT)
          Sanda Harabagiu (SMU)
          Graeme Hirst (University of Toronto)
          Claudia Leacock (ETS Technologies)
          Steven Maiorano (AAT)
          Rada Mihalcea (SMU)
          Dan Moldovan (SMU)
          German Rigau (Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya, Spain)
          Maria Tereza Pazienza (Universita di Roma Tor Vergata, Italy)
	  Paola Velardi (Universita degli Studi di Roma, "La Sapienza")
          Ellen Voorhees (NIST)

Organizers: Dan Moldovan (SMU)
	    Sanda Harabagiu (SMU)

II. OVERVIEW

WordNet has become a valuable resource in the human language technology
and artificial intelligence. It has been used so far in  Word Sense
Disambiguation, Generation, Information Retrieval, Question Answering,
Summarization, Reference Resolution and other aspects of NLP.

The success of many NLP applications depends on the availability
of linguistic information that  defines  word senses and typical
relations between concepts. Many modern, advanced NLP applications
combine the information encoded in WordNet with statistical data,
brought forward by the analysis of large text collections,
complementing the knowledge encoded in WordNet with  empirical  data.


Due to its vast coverage of  English words, WordNet
provides with general lexico-semantic information on which open-domain
text processing is based. Furthermore, the development of WordNets in
several other languages extends this capability to trans-lingual
applications, enabling text mining across languages. For example,
in Europe, WordNet is being used to develop a multilingual database
for several European languages (the EuroWordNet project).

Recently, several extensions of the WordNet lexical database have
been initiated, in the United States and abroad, with the goal
of providing the NLP community with additional knowledge that
models pragmatic information not always present in
the texts but  required by document processing.

The workshop  provides a forum for presentations and discussions of
the latest WordNet extensions and their impact on various applications.
The workshop will also foster discussions that reveal to the NLP
community current and future requirements of linguistic resources
and ways of embedding them in WordNet.

Since to date, WordNet has been incorporated in several other
linguistic and general knowledge bases (e.g. FrameNet and CYK)
presentations of the interactions of WordNet with other resources as
well as their applications are sought.

This  Workshop is three years after the first WordNet
Workshop in 1998, time in which many WordNet developments
and applications occurred.


The target audience consists of researches currently engaged in
developing WordNet extensions, researchers interested in lexical
resources, those who use or plan to use WordNet, and research policy makers.
The interest in WordNet and its applications is worldwide.
	

III. CALL FOR PAPERS
Authors are invited to submit manuscripts that describe unpublished
research results in any area of extensions and applications of WordNet.
Topics include but are not limited to:

	* WordNet usage in NLP and AI

	* WordNet  extensions

	* Integration of WordNet with other lexico-semantic resources

	* Corpus-based acquisition of WordNet-like knowledge

	* Mining common-sense knowledge from WordNet and other resources

	* Multilingua WordNets and applications

	* WordNet granularity and synset merging


IV. PAPER SUBMISSION

IMPORTANT DATES

	Paper submission deadline:	January 22, 2001
	
	Notification of acceptance:	February 16, 2001

	Camera ready due:	        March 2, 2001

	Workshop date: 			June 3 or 4, 2001


WHERE and HOW


Submissions must use the NAACL latex style or Microsoft Word style.
Paper submissions should consist of a full paper (6 pages or less).

Electronic submission only. Please send the pdf or postscript file
of your paper to:
          moldovan at seas.smu.edu.
Because the review will be blind, no author information is included
as part of the paper. A separate identification page must be sent
by email including title, all authors, theme area, keywords,
word count, and an abstract of no more than 5 lines. Late submissions
will not be accepted. Notification  of receipt will be e-mailed to
the first author shortly after receipt.

Please address any questions to moldovan at seas.smu.edu

One can download the appropriate style or template files using the
following links:

NAACL style file
http://www.seas.smu.edu/~moldovan/wn-workshop/latex/naacl2001sub.sty

NAACL bibliography style file
http://www.seas.smu.edu/~moldovan/wn-workshop/latex/acl.bst

Latex sample file
http://www.seas.smu.edu/~moldovan/wn-workshop/latex/samplesub.tex

Microsoft Word Template file
http://www.seas.smu.edu/~moldovan/wn-workshop/latex/naacl-2001-sub.dot


-------------------------------- Message 2 -------------------------------

Date:  Thu, 7 Dec 2000 14:54:56 EST
From:  Priscilla Rasmussen <rasmusse at cs.rutgers.edu>
Subject:  ACL-2001 - Computational Linguistics


                 ACL-2001 Final Call For Papers

             39th Annual Meeting of the Association for
                    Computational Linguistics
                        6 - 11 July, 2001
                        Toulouse, France

       http://www.irit.fr/ACTIVITES/EQ_ILPL/aclWeb/acl2001.html


General Conference Chair: Bonnie Webber (Univ. of Edinburgh, UK)
Program Co-Chairs:        Norbert Reithinger (DFKI, Saarbruecken, Germany)
                          Giorgio Satta (Univ. of Padua, Italy)
Local Organization Chair: Patrick Saint-Dizier (IRIT, Toulouse, France)


The Association for Computational Linguistics invites the submission of
papers for its 39th Annual Meeting, which this year is jointly hosted
with the European Chapter.  Papers are invited on substantial, original,
and unpublished research on all aspects of computational linguistics,
including, but not limited to: pragmatics, discourse, semantics, syntax
and the lexicon; phonetics, phonology and morphology; interpreting and
generating spoken and written language; linguistic, mathematical and
psychological models of language; language-oriented information
retrieval and information extraction; corpus-based language modeling;
multi-lingual processing, machine translation and translation aids;
natural language interfaces and dialogue systems; approaches to
coordinating the linguistic with other modalities in multi-media
systems; message and narrative understanding systems; tools and
resources; and evaluation of systems.


Requirements
- ----------

Papers should describe original work; they should emphasize completed
work rather than intended work, and should indicate clearly the state
of completion of the reported results. Wherever appropriate, concrete
evaluation results should be included. A paper accepted for
presentation at the ACL Meeting cannot be presented or have been
presented at any other meeting with publicly available published
proceedings. Papers that are being submitted to other conferences must
indicate this on the title page. (See Submission Format below.)


Reviewing
- -------

The reviewing of the papers will be blind. Reviewing will be managed by
the international Conference Program Committee consisting of the
following nine Area Chairs, each assisted by a team of reviewers.

    Jennifer Chu-Carroll (Lucent Technologies Bell Labs, USA)
    Joshua Goodman (Microsoft Research, USA)
    Pierre Isabelle (Xerox Research Centre Europe, France)
    Adam Kilgarriff (ITRI, University of Brighton, UK)
    Lillian Lee (Cornell University, USA)
    Adwait Ratnaparkhi (IBM TJ Watson Research Center, USA)
    Ehud Reiter (University of Aberdeen, UK)
    James Rogers (Earlham College, USA)
    David Weir (University of Sussex, UK)

Final decisions on the technical program will be made by the Conference
Program Committee. Each submission will be reviewed by at least three
reviewers.


Submission Format
- ---------------

Papers must be submitted in hard copy. Submissions should follow the
two-column format of ACL proceedings and should not exceed eight (8)
pages, including references. We strongly recommend the use of ACL LaTeX
style files or Microsoft Word Style files tailored for this year's
conference. They are available from the ACL-2001 program committee
Web-site at http://acl2001.dfki.de/style/. These style files allow for a
graceful transition to the style required for publication.  A
description of the format is also available in case you are unable to
use these style files directly.

As reviewing will be blind, a separate identification page will be
required.  The identification page should include the paper title, the
paper ID code generated upon paper registration (see below), authors'
names, affiliations, and email addresses, up to 5 keywords specifying
the subject area, and a short summary (up to 5 lines).  The
identification page should also specify whether the paper is under
consideration for other conferences.

The paper should not include the authors' names and
affiliations. Furthermore, self-references that reveal the author's
identity, e.g., "We previously showed (Smith, 1991) ...", should be
avoided. Instead, use citations such as "Smith previously showed (Smith,
1991) ...".

Papers that do not conform to the requirements above are subject to be
rejected without review.


Submission Procedure
- ------------------

1) Submission notification: You must first register your submission by
January 26, 2001. This can be done by filling out an electronic form
directly at http://www.dfki.de/cgi-bin/acl2001/submission.cgi or via
http://acl2001.dfki.de/. The form requires a specification of the
title and authors of the paper, as well as a preliminary abstract and
list of keywords. Submitting the form will return to you via email a
paper ID code which must appear on your submission. Please use the
paper ID code in all correspondences with the program committee
co-chairs.

Do not re-submit your paper if you have already received an ID! If you
want to change any information in your submission notification, please
mail the PC co-chairs at acl2001 at dfki.de and include your paper ID in
the subject of the mail.

If you have any difficulty using the electronic registration form,
please send email to the PC co-chairs at acl2001 at dfki.de with all of the
title page information plus the authors' names and affiliations.

2) Paper submission: Submissions must be received by February 2, 2001.
Late submissions (those arriving after February 2) will be returned
without review. The Program Committee is not responsible for postal
delays or other mailing problems. Six (6) paper copies (printed on both
sides of the page if possible) including the title page should be
submitted to the following address:

       ACL-2001 Submission
       Norbert Reithinger
       DFKI GmbH
       Stuhlsatzenhausweg 3
       D-66123 Saarbruecken
       Germany

Two of the six copies must have the identification page attached. In
addition, strictly for the purposes of partially-automated routing of
papers to area chairs and reviewers, authors should send an electronic
version of the paper (without the identification page) to
acl2001-submissions at dfki.de. Please include the paper ID  in the
subject line of your email. Latex, postscript, pdf, Microsoft word and
plain text are all acceptable formats for the electronic version.  The
electronic version should also be received by February 2nd, 2001. Please
note that as the electronic version will only be used to assist the PC
in distributing the papers to appropriate reviewers, this supplementary
electronic version in no way replaces the required hardcopy
submissions. If you have any difficulty in submitting the electronic
version, please send mail to the PC co-chairs at acl2001 at dfki.de.

Acknowledgment of hardcopy submission will be emailed soon after
receipt. Notification of acceptance will be sent to authors (by email)
on or after April, 12th. Detailed formatting guidelines for the
preparation of the final camera-ready copy will be provided to authors
with their acceptance notice. Authors of accepted papers will have to
submit a signed copyright release statement along with the final
camera-ready papers.


Deadlines
- -------

     Paper registration deadline:                 January 26th, 2001
     Paper submissions deadline:                  February 2nd, 2001
     Notification of acceptance:                  April 12th, 2001
     Camera ready papers due:                     May 12th, 2001
     ACL 2001 Conference:                         July 6th-11th, 2001


Submission Questions
- ------------------

Authors unable to comply with the above submission procedure should
contact the program committee co-chairs at acl2001 at dfki.de
sufficiently ahead of the submission deadline so that alternate
arrangements can be made.


Mentoring Service
- ---------------

ACL 2001 is organizing a mentoring (coaching) service for authors from
regions of the world where English is not the language of scientific
exchange. Many authors from these regions, although able to read the
scientific literature in English, have little or no experience in
writing papers in English for conferences such as the ACL meetings.
They may also have some trouble with the style of the presentation of
the material that is expected for ACL.

The service will be arranged as follows. A set of potential mentors
will be identified by Aravind Joshi, who has agreed to organize this
service for ACL 2001. An author who would like to take advantage of
this service must send a draft of his/her paper to

       Aravind K. Joshi
       Room 555 Moore
       Department of Computer and Information Science
       200 South 33rd Street
       University of Pennsylvania
       Philadelphia PA 19104-6389
       USA

       fax: +1 215 898 0587

The author must send one (1) copy of the paper (hard copy by regular
mail, courier service, or fax) by no later than December 20, 2000. The
author should try to make the draft as complete as possible in order to
get the best advice. An appropriate mentor will be assigned to each
paper and the mentor will get back to the author at least two weeks
before the deadline for the submission to ACL 2001 program committee.

Please note that this service is for the benefit of the authors as
described above. It is not a general mentoring service for authors to
improve their papers.

If you have any questions about this service please feel free to send
a message to Aravind Joshi (joshi at linc.cis.upenn.edu).

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