22.4713, Calls: Comp Ling, Socioling, Historical Ling, Typology/Poland

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LINGUIST List: Vol-22-4713. Sun Nov 27 2011. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 22.4713, Calls: Comp Ling, Socioling, Historical Ling, Typology/Poland

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1)
Date: 27-Nov-2011
From: Gerhard Jaeger [gerhard.jaeger at uni-tuebingen.de]
Subject: ESSLLI Workshop: Computational Approaches to the Study of Dialectal and Typological Variation


-------------------------Message 1 ---------------------------------- 
Date: Sun, 27 Nov 2011 16:25:30
From: Gerhard Jaeger [gerhard.jaeger at uni-tuebingen.de]
Subject: ESSLLI Workshop: Computational Approaches to the Study of Dialectal and Typological Variation

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Full Title: ESSLLI Workshop: Computational Approaches to the Study of Dialectal and Typological Variation 

Date: 06-Aug-2012 - 10-Aug-2012
Location: Opole, Poland 
Contact Person: Erhard Hinrichs
Meeting Email: erhard.hinrichs at uni-tuebingen.de

Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics; Historical Linguistics; Sociolinguistics; Text/Corpus Linguistics; Typology 

Call Deadline: 15-Feb-2012 

Meeting Description:

Computational Approaches to the Study of Dialectal and Typological Variation
Workshop organized as part of the European Summer School on Logic, Language and Information ESSLLI 2012 (http://www.esslli2012.pl), August 6-10 2012 (ESSLLI first week), Opole, Poland

Workshop Organizers: Erhard Hinrichs (erhard.hinrichs at uni-tuebingen.de), Gerhard Jaeger (gerhard.jaeger at uni-tuebingen.de) 

Workshop Purpose: 

Computational dialectometry is an innovative method to investigate language variation. This still rather young approach employs techniques from statistical NLP - such as pattern recognition, sequence alignment, clustering, and dimension reduction techniques - to study synchronous dialectal variation. It uses easy-to-operationalize data (such as phonetic transcriptions of a small core vocabulary) collected from a large number of speakers within a certain geographic area. Methods from unsupervised machine learning are then used to measure dialect distances and to model dialect continua. Together with advances in digitally collecting population and geographic data, it is now possible to study the correlation of linguistic variation with social and geographic factors.

Recent years have seen remarkable efforts in typology to set up electronic data inventories that contain significant data sets from large, typologically diverse and representative samples of languages. The data types thus collected in computational typology are remarkably similar - from an operational point of view - to the kind of resources that are being used in computational dialectometry. It is therefore a natural move to bring these two communities into contact and to discuss the mutual usability of algorithms and perhaps common standards for data encoding and exchange.

The goals of this workshop are twofold: 

- To expose the ESSLLI community in general and researchers at the interface of language and computation in particular to the application of data-driven NLP methods to a rather new domain
- To provide a forum for practitioners and students of computational dialectometry, of quantitative typology, and of historical linguistics to learn about each other's research concerns and accompanying methods, and to receive feedback as well as inspiration for possible collaboration across sub-disciplines 

Call for Papers:

Submission Details:

Authors are invited to submit an extended abstract for a 30-minute presentation (including discussion). Submissions should not exceed 3 pages, including figures, data, and references. Details about the anonymous electronic submission procedure will be posted with the second call for papers. The submissions will be reviewed anonymously by the workshop's program committee. The abstracts accepted for presentation will appear in the workshop website and be published as part of the ESSLLI 2012 proceedings. In addition, we are considering the possibility of compiling a journal special issue from selected papers presented at the workshop.  

Program Committee:

TBA

Local Arrangements: 

All workshop participants, including the authors, are required to register for ESSLLI.  

Important Dates:

December 20: Second call for papers
January 15: Final call for papers
February 15: Deadline for submission
April 15: Notification of acceptance
June 1: Deadline for proceedings papers
August 6-10: Workshop





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