Corpora: CFP CL Special Issue: Web As Corpus
Adam Kilgarriff
adam.kilgarriff at itri.brighton.ac.uk
Fri Sep 28 14:56:23 UTC 2001
CALL FOR PAPERS
SPECIAL ISSUE of COMPUTATIONAL LINGUISTICS
Web as Corpus
Guest editors
Adam Kilgarriff, ITRI, University of Brighton and
Oxford University Press
Gregory Grefenstette, Clairvoyance Corporation
The Web is an immense, multilingual, freely available corpus. As with
other large new corpora, computational linguists have been stimulated
by its presence. Web research includes many of the most talked about
papers of recent ACL and other meetings (eg Resnik, ACL '99; Brill,
"Does the web change everything?", ACL SIGNLL '01).
In comparison with most corpora studied to date, the web is
heterogeneous and noisy. Methods for handling the noise, and
extracting and exploiting subcorpora meeting particular criteria, are
being developed by a widening population ranging from students who
realise that it is an obvious place to obtain their corpus for free,
to companies who seek to use HLT techniques on datasets other than the
ones HLT researchers usually use.
NLP can both give to, and take from, the web (distinction due to
Dragomir Radev). It can give to the web technologies such as
summarisation, MT and question-answering. But the giving side of the
equation looks only at short-to-medium term goals. For the longer
term, for 'giving' as well as for other purposes, a deeper
understanding of the linguistic nature of the web and its potential
for CL/NLP is required. For that, we must take the web itself, in
whatever limited way, as an object of study, and uncover what it has
to tell us about the nature of language. The Special Issue will focus
on how we can use the web, rather than how we can help web users.
The issues which we will expect Special Issue papers to cover include:
Lexical data derived from the Web
Classifying Web language; the range of text types on the Web
Mapping Web documents onto existing ontologies;
implications for ontologies
Clustering in an open corpus
The multilingual Web as a resource for translation
CL/HLT engagement with the Semantic Web
SCHEDULE
Papers due: 30 April 2002
SUBMISSION PROCEDURE
Initial submissions should be sent to:
1. Guest Editors
adam.kilgarriff at itri.brighton.ac.uk, grefen at clairvoyancecorp.com
2. Publishing Editor
Julia Hirschberg (julia at research.att.com)
For initial submissions only, authors should send electronic copies
(postscript, pdf, rtf, or doc) to both the Guest Editors and the
Publishing Editor. Please indicate that the submission is for the
Special Issue of Computational Linguistics: Web as Corpus.
Questions about submissions should be directed to the two Guest
Editors, rather than the Journal or Publishing Editors.
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