28.1993, Calls: Computational Linguistics/UK

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LINGUIST List: Vol-28-1993. Fri Apr 28 2017. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 28.1993, Calls: Computational Linguistics/UK

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Date: Fri, 28 Apr 2017 12:40:42
From: Petya Osenova [petya at bultreebank.org]
Subject: Student Research Workshop

 
Full Title: Student Research Workshop 

Date: 13-Nov-2017 - 13-Nov-2017
Location: London, United Kingdom 
Contact Person: Victoria Yaneva
Meeting Email: v.yaneva at wlv.ac.uk
Web Site: http://rgcl.wlv.ac.uk/europhras2017/ 

Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics 

Call Deadline: 29-May-2017 

Meeting Description:

The forthcoming international conference ‘Computational and Corpus-based
Phraseology – recent advances and interdisciplinary approaches’ would like to
invite students at all levels (Bachelor-, Master-, and PhD-students) to
present their ongoing work at the Student Research Workshop. The aim of this
workshop is to facilitate the exchange of knowledge between young researchers
by providing an excellent opportunity to present and discuss their work in
progress or completed projects to an international research audience and
receive feedback from senior researchers. The research being presented can
come from any topic area related to phraseology including, but not limited to:
computational, corpus-based, psycholinguistic and cognitive approaches to the
study of phraseology, and practical applications in computational linguistics,
translation, lexicography and language learning, teaching and assessment.


Call for Papers:

The topics cover but are not limited to the following:

Computational approaches to the study of multiword expressions, e.g. automatic
detection, classification and extraction of multiword expressions; automatic
translation of multiword expressions; computational treatment of proper names;
multiword expressions in NLP tasks and applications such as parsing, machine
translation, text summarisation, term extraction, web search.

Corpus-based approaches to phraseology, e.g. corpus-based empirical studies of
phraseology, task-orientated typologies of phraseological units (e.g. for
annotation, lexicographic representation, etc.), annotation schemes,
applications in applied linguistics and more specifically translation,
interpreting, lexicography, terminology, language learning, teaching and
assessment (see also below)

Phraseology in mono- and bilingual lexicography and terminography, e.g. new
forms of presenting phraseological units in dictionaries and other lexical
resources based on corpus-based and corpus-driven approaches; domain-specific
terminology;

Phraseology in translation and cross-linguistic studies, e.g. use parallel and
comparable corpora for translating of phraseological units; phraseological
units in computer-aided translation; study of phraseology across languages;

Phraseology in specialised languages and language dialects, e.g. phraseology
of specialised languages, study of phraseological use in different dialects or
varieties of a specific languagePhraseology in language learning, teaching and
assessment: e.g. second language/bilingual processing of phraseological units
and formulaic language; phraseological units in learner language;

Theoretical and descriptive approaches to phraseology, e.g. phraseological
units and the lexis-grammar interface, the relevance of phraseology for
theoretical models of grammar, the representation of phraseological units in
constituency and dependency theories, phraseology and its interaction with
semantics;

Cognitive and psycholinguistic approaches: e.g. cognitive models of
phraseological unit comprehension and production; on-line measures of
phraseological unit processing (e.g. eye tracking, event-related potentials,
self-paced reading); phraseology and language disorders; phraseology and text
readability;

As mentioned earlier, the above list is indicative and not exhaustive. Any
submission presenting a study related to the alternative terms of
phraseological units, multiword expressions, multiword units, formulaic
language or polylexical expressions, will be considered.

Submissions and publication:

The workshop invites two types of submissions:

Short papers: these papers will not exceed 7 pages and will be available as
conference e-proceedings with ISBN and will be available at the time of the
conference

Poster presentations: these papers will not exceed 4 pages and will be
included in the conference e-proceedings along with the short papers

The workshop will not consider the submission and evaluation of abstracts
only.

Submission will be handled via the START system. For updates on how to submit,
please follow the workshop webpage
(http://rgcl.wlv.ac.uk/europhras2017/student-workshop/).

Important Dates:

29 May 2017 – Deadline for submitting papers
17 July 2017 – All authors notified of decisions
5 September 2017 – Deadline for final version of all types of papers
13 November 2017 – Workshop takes place in LondonWorkshop

Organisers:

Victoria Yaneva, University of Wolverhampton
Shiva Taslimipoor, University of Wolverhampton
Victoria Valencia Giraldo, University of Malaga




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LINGUIST List: Vol-28-1993	
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