[Corpora-List] Corpora Digest, Vol 20, Issue 4 Internet chat corpora research
Davis, Boyd
bdavis at uncc.edu
Thu Feb 5 14:31:25 UTC 2009
You will find several articles on chat in Kelsey, Sigrid and Kirk St.Amant, eds. Handbook of Research on Computer Mediated Communication. IGI Global, 2008, including one by me and Peyton Mason on textchat, which is corpus-based. Hope this helps
Boyd Davis
-----Original Message-----
From: corpora-bounces at uib.no on behalf of corpora-request at uib.no
Sent: Thu 2/5/2009 9:00 AM
To: corpora at uib.no
Subject: Corpora Digest, Vol 20, Issue 4
Today's Topics:
1. EVALITA 2009 First Call for Participation (Manuela Speranza)
2. SIGDIAL 2009: Preliminary Call for Papers (Matthew Purver)
3. Second call for paper: "Natural Language Processing for
Ancient Languages" (Serge Rosmorduc)
4. 2 PhD positions in Natural Language Processing (Paul Buitelaar)
5. CfP: Workshop on Integer Linear Programming for NLP at NAACL
HLT 2009 (Sebastian Riedel)
6. Looking for Internet chat corpora research (Leszek Szyma?ski)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Message: 1
Date: Tue, 3 Feb 2009 19:30:35 +0100
From: Manuela Speranza <manspera at fbk.eu>
Subject: [Corpora-List] EVALITA 2009 First Call for Participation
To: corpora at uib.no
<apologies for cross-posting>
********************************************************************
EVALITA 2009
Evaluation of NLP and Speech Tools for Italian
http://evalita.fbk.eu
********************************************************************
EVALITA 2009 - First Call for Participation
February 2009
We are pleased to announce that the registration to EVALITA 2009,
the second evaluation campaign of Natural Language Processing and
Speech tools for Italian, is now open.
The general objective of Evalita is to promote the development of
language technologies for the Italian language, providing a shared
framework where different systems and approaches can be evaluated
in a consistent manner.
We invite participation, both from academic institutions and
industrial organizations, in eight tasks, all for Italian.
With respect to the previous edition, tasks also include a range of
Speech tasks and a new Textual Entailment task.
Text tasks
- PoS-Tagging
- Parsing
- Dependency Parsing
- Constituency Parsing
- Lexical substitution
- Entity Recognition
- Named Entity Recognition
- Local Entity Detection and Recognition
- Textual Entailment
Speech tasks
- Connected Digits Recognition
- Clean Digits
- Noisy Digits
- Dialogue System Evaluation
- Speaker Identity Verification
- Application
- Forensic
As with the previous edition, guidelines describing the different tasks
will be distributed to participants.
Participants will also be provided with training data and will have
the chance to test their systems with the evaluation metrics and
procedures to be used in the formal evaluation.
The results of the evaluation will be disseminated at the final
workshop, which will be organized in conjunction with AI*IA 2009
and will take place in ReggioEmilia (to be confirmed).
In order to register for one or more of the EVALITA 2009 tasks,
please go to the registration page of the EVALITA 2009 website:
http://evalita.fbk.eu/registration.html
Please notice that some weeks ago there has been a change in the
important dates.
Updated information is always available on the website at
http://evalita.fbk.eu
Timeline
- 1st February 2009: on-line registration opens
- 1st April 2009: development data available to participants
- 10th September 2009: test data available, registration closes
- 20th September 2009: system results due to organizers
- 5th October 2009: assessment returned to participants
- 25th October 2009: technical reports due to organizers
- 12th December 2009: final workshop, Reggio Emilia (to be confirmed)
Coordination:
Bernardo Magnini (FBK-irst) and Amedeo Cappelli (ISTI-CNR and CELCT)
Task Organization:
- PoS-Tagging: Giuseppe Attardi and Maria Simi (Uni. Pisa)
- Parsing: Cristina Bosco, Alessandro Mazzei, Vincenzo Lombardo
(Uni. Torino), Felice dell'Orletta (Uni. Pisa), Alessandro Lenci
(Uni. Pisa) and Simonetta Montemagni (ILC-CNR, Pisa)
- Lexical Substitution: Antonio Toral (ILC-CNR, Pisa)
- Entity Recognition: Manuela Speranza (FBK-irst, Trento),
Valentina Bartalesi Lenzi, Rachele Sprugnoli (CELCT, Trento)
- Textual Entailment: Johan Bos (Uni. Roma "La Sapienza"),
Marco Pennacchiotti (Saarland University), Fabio Massimo
Zanzotto (Uni. Roma "Tor Vergata")
- Connected Digits Recognition: Gianpaolo Coro (ABLA, Milano),
Roberto Gretter (FBK-irst, Trento) and Marco Matassoni (FBK-irst,
Trento)
- Spoken Dialogue Evaluation: Giuseppe Riccardi (Uni. Trento),
Francesco Cutugno (Uni. Napoli "Federico II") and Roberto Pieraccini
(Speechcycle, New York)
- Speaker Identity Verification: Guido Aversano (Parrot SA, Paris)
and Luciano Romito (Uni. Calabria, Cosenza)
Contact: Manuela Speranza - manspera at fbk.eu
------------------------------
Message: 2
Date: Wed, 04 Feb 2009 14:40:14 +0000
From: Matthew Purver <mpurver at dcs.qmul.ac.uk>
Subject: [Corpora-List] SIGDIAL 2009: Preliminary Call for Papers
To: CORPORA list <corpora at hd.uib.no>
SIGDIAL 2009 CONFERENCE
10th Annual Meeting of the Special Interest Group
on Discourse and Dialogue
Queen Mary University of London, UK September 11-12, 2009
(right after Interspeech 2009)
Submission Deadline: April 24, 2009
PRELIMINARY CALL FOR PAPERS
The SIGDIAL venue provides a regular forum for the presentation of
cutting edge research in discourse and dialogue to both academic and
industry researchers. Due to the success of the nine previous SIGDIAL
workshops, SIGDIAL is now a conference. The conference is sponsored by
the SIGDIAL organization, which serves as the Special Interest Group in
discourse and dialogue for both ACL and ISCA. SIGDIAL 2009 will be
co-located with Interspeech 2009 as a satellite event.
In addition to presentations and system demonstrations, the program
includes an invited talk by Professor Janet Bavelas of the University of
Victoria, entitled "What's unique about dialogue?".
TOPICS OF INTEREST
We welcome formal, corpus-based, implementation, experimental, or
analytical work on discourse and dialogue including, but not restricted
to, the following themes:
1. Discourse Processing and Dialogue Systems
Discourse semantic and pragmatic issues in NLP applications such as text
summarization, question answering, information retrieval including
topics like:
- Discourse structure, temporal structure, information structure ;
- Discourse markers, cues and particles and their use;
- (Co-)Reference and anaphora resolution, metonymy and bridging resolution;
- Subjectivity, opinions and semantic orientation;
Spoken, multi-modal, and text/web based dialogue systems including
topics such as:
- Dialogue management models;
- Speech and gesture, text and graphics integration;
- Strategies for preventing, detecting or handling miscommunication
(repair and correction types, clarification and under-specificity,
grounding and feedback strategies);
- Utilizing prosodic information for understanding and for disambiguation;
2. Corpora, Tools and Methodology
Corpus-based and experimental work on discourse and spoken, text-based
and multi-modal dialogue including its support, in particular:
- Annotation tools and coding schemes;
- Data resources for discourse and dialogue studies;
- Corpus-based techniques and analysis (including machine learning);
- Evaluation of systems and components, including methodology, metrics
and case studies;
3. Pragmatic and/or Semantic Modeling
The pragmatics and/or semantics of discourse and dialogue (i.e. beyond a
single sentence) including the following issues:
- The semantics/pragmatics of dialogue acts (including those which are
less studied in the semantics/pragmatics framework);
- Models of discourse/dialogue structure and their relation to
referential and relational structure;
- Prosody in discourse and dialogue;
- Models of presupposition and accommodation; operational models of
conversational implicature.
SUBMISSIONS
The program committee welcomes the submission of long papers for full
plenary presentation as well as short papers and demonstrations. Short
papers and demo descriptions will be featured in short plenary
presentations, followed by posters and demonstrations.
- Long papers must be no longer than 8 pages, including title, examples,
references, etc. In addition to this, two additional pages are allowed
as an appendix which may include extended example discourses or
dialogues, algorithms, graphical representations, etc.
- Short papers and demo descriptions should be 4 pages or less
(including title, examples, references, etc.).
Please use the official ACL style files:
http://ufal.mff.cuni.cz/acl2007/styles/
Papers that have been or will be submitted to other meetings or
publications must provide this information (see submission format).
SIGDIAL 2009 cannot accept for publication or presentation work that
will be (or has been) published elsewhere. Any questions regarding
submissions can be sent to the General Co-Chairs.
Authors are encouraged to make illustrative materials available, on the
web or otherwise. Examples might include excerpts of recorded
conversations, recordings of human-computer dialogues, interfaces to
working systems, and so on.
BEST PAPER AWARDS
In order to recognize significant advancements in dialog and discourse
science and technology, SIGDIAL will (for the first time) recognize a
BEST PAPER AWARD and a BEST STUDENT PAPER AWARD. A selection committee
consisting of prominent researchers in the fields of interest will
select the recipients of the awards.
IMPORTANT DATES (SUBJECT TO CHANGE)
Submission: April 24, 2009
Workshop: September 11-12, 2009
WEBSITES
SIGDIAL 2009 conference website:
http://www.sigdial.org/workshops/workshop10/
SIGDIAL organization website: http://www.sigdial.org/
Interspeech 2009 website: http://www.interspeech2009.org/
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
For any questions, please contact the appropriate members of the
organizing committee:
GENERAL CO-CHAIRS
Pat Healey (Queen Mary University of London): ph at dcs.qmul.ac.uk
Roberto Pieraccini (SpeechCycle): roberto at speechcycle.com
TECHNICAL PROGRAM CO-CHAIRS
Donna Byron (Northeastern University): dbyron at ccs.neu.edu
Steve Young (University of Cambridge): sjy at eng.cam.ac.uk
LOCAL CHAIR
Matt Purver (Queen Mary University of London): mpurver at dcs.qmul.ac.uk
SIGDIAL PRESIDENT
Tim Paek (Microsoft Research): timpaek at microsoft.com
SIGDIAL VICE PRESIDENT
Amanda Stent (AT&T Labs - Research): amanda.stent at gmail.com
TECHNICAL PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Gregory Aist Arizona State University, USA
Jan Alexandersson DFKI GmbH, Germany
Jason Baldridge University of Texas at Austin, USA
Srinivas Bangalore AT&T Labs - Research, USA
Dan Bohus Microsoft Research, USA
Johan Bos Università di Roma "La Sapienza", Italy
Charles Calloway University of Edinburgh, UK
Rolf Carlson Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), Sweden
Mark Core University of Southern California, USA
David DeVault University of Southern California, USA
Myroslava Dzikovska University of Edinburgh, UK
Markus Egg Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, Netherlands
Stephanie Elzer Millersville University, USA
Mary Ellen Foster Technical University Munich, Germany
Kallirroi Georgila University of Edinburgh, UK
Jonathan Ginzburg King's College London, UK
Genevieve Gorrell Sheffield University, UK
Alexander Gruenstein Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
Pat Healey Queen Mary University of London, UK
Mattias Heldner Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), Sweden
Beth Ann Hockey University of California at Santa Cruz, USA
Kristiina Jokinen University of Helsinki, Finland
Arne Jonsson University of Linköping, Sweden
Simon Keizer University of Cambridge, UK
John Kelleher Dublin Institute of Technology, Ireland
Alexander Koller University of Edinburgh, UK
Ivana Kruijff-Korbayová Universität des Saarlandes, Germany
Staffan Larsson Göteborg University, Sweden
Gary Geunbae Lee Pohang University of Science and Technology,
Korea
Fabrice Lefevre University of Avignon, France
Oliver Lemon University of Edinburgh, UK
James Lester North Carolina State University, USA
Diane Litman University of Pittsburgh, USA
Ramón López-Cózar University of Granada, Spain
François Mairesse University of Cambridge, UK
Michael McTear University of Ulster, UK
Wolfgang Minker University of Ulm, Germany
Sebastian Möller Deutsche Telekom Labs and Technical
University Berlin, Germany
Vincent Ng University of Texas at Dallas, USA
Tim Paek Microsoft Research, USA
Patrick Paroubek LIMSI-CNRS, France
Roberto Pieraccini SpeechCycle, USA
Paul Piwek Open University, UK
Rashmi Prasad University of Pennsylvania, USA
Matt Purver Queen Mary University of London, UK
Laurent Romary INRIA, France
Alex Rudnicky Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Yoshinori Sagisaka Waseda University, Japan
Ruhi Sarikaya IBM Research, USA
Candy Sidner BAE Systems AIT, USA
Ronnie Smith East Carolina University, USA
Amanda Stent AT&T Labs - Research, USA
Matthew Stone Rutgers University, USA
Matthew Stuttle Toshiba Research, UK
Joel Tetreault Educational Testing Service, USA
Jason Williams AT&T Labs - Research, USA
--
Matthew Purver - http://www.dcs.qmul.ac.uk/~mpurver/
Senior Research Fellow
Interaction, Media and Communication
Department of Computer Science
Queen Mary University of London, London E1 4NS, UK
------------------------------
Message: 3
Date: Wed, 04 Feb 2009 12:20:03 +0100
From: Serge Rosmorduc <s.rosmorduc at iut.univ-paris8.fr>
Subject: [Corpora-List] Second call for paper: "Natural Language
Processing for Ancient Languages"
To: corpora at uib.no
Second call for paper: "Natural Language Processing for Ancient Languages"
Guest editors: Joseph Denooz and Serge Rosmorduc
The TAL journal launches a call for papers for an special issue of the
journal on NLP for Ancient Languages.
« Ancient Languages » is here understood on a large basis: we consider
both dead languages (Akkadian, Ancient Egyptian, Latin...) and old
stages of modern languages (Old and Middle French...).
Proposals may deal with all aspect of computer storage and processing of
ancient languages, as for instance:
automated morphological or syntactic analysis of ancient languages;
text corpora (creation of a corpus, searches systems, etc.);
dictionaries;
encoding of ancient languages (scripting system, text representation,
unicode and ISO 10646, etc.);
XML, TEI and ancient languages (use of XML to model ancient documents,
corpus representation, DTD or schemas for dictionaries) ;
text capture, OCR and ancient texts, links between pictures corpora and
structured representations;
NLP as a tool for the philologist (practical uses of NLP in the context
of philological or grammatical research).
uses of NLP in teaching ancient languages.
diachronic studies (models for language change, diachronic databases, etc.)
The Journal
TAL (Traitement Automatique des Langues / Natural Language Processing)
is a forty year old international journal published by ATALA (French
Association for Natural Language Processing) with the support of CNRS
(National Centre for Scientific Research). It has moved to an electronic
mode of publication, with printing on demand - see
http://atala.org/-Revue-TAL-. This affects in no way its reviewing and
selection process.
Practical issues
Contributions (25 pages maximum, PDF format) must be sent by e-mail to
the following address: (rosmord _at_ iut dot univ-paris8 dot fr)
Style sheets are available for download on the Web site of the journal:
http://atala.org/English-style-files.
Language: manuscripts may be submitted in English or French.
French-speaking authors are requested to submit in French.
Important dates
27/02/2009 Deadline for submission.
31/04/2009 Notification to authors.
03/06/2009 Deadline for submission of a revised version.
03/07/2009 Final decision.
October 2009 Parution
Invited editorial board
François Barthélémy, CEDRIC, Conservatoire National des Arts et
Métiers, France
Mahé Ben Hamed, Laboratoire Dynamique du langage, CNRS - Université
Lumière Lyon 2
Francesco Citti, Université de Bologne,
Joseph Denooz, LASLA, Université de Liège, Belgique
Gérard Huet, Équipe Sanscrit, INRIA, France
Wojciech Jaworski, Institute of Informatics, Warsaw University,
Bastien Kindt, Institut orientaliste, Université catholique de Louvain,
Belgique
George Kiraz, Gorgias Press, USA
Christiane Marchello-Nizia, ICAR, ENS Lyon
Nicolas Mazziotta, , Université de Liège, Belgique
Sylvie Mellet, BCL, CNRS,
Remo Mugnaioni, Centre Sciences du Langage, EA 85, Université de Provence
Mark-Jan Nederhof, University of St Andrews
Mark Olsen, ARTFL, Université de Chicago
Gerald Penn, Department of Computer Sciences, University of Toronto, Canada
Serge Rosmorduc, Équipe Langues et littératures de l'Égypte ancienne,
EPHE Ivième section,
Wolfgang Schenkel, , Université de Tügingen, RFA
Richard Sproat, University of Illinois, USA,
Achim Stein , Institut für Linguistik/Romanistik, Universität Stuttgart
Paul Tombeur, CTLO (Turnhout), Belgique
Laurence Tuerlinckx, Institut orientaliste, Université catholique de
Louvain, Belgique
Jerzy Tyszkiewicz, Institute of Informatics, Warsaw University,
Jean Winand, Service d'Égyptologie, Université de Liège, Belgique
This call for paper is available in various formats on
http://www.iut.univ-paris8.fr/~rosmord/TAL/
------------------------------
Message: 4
Date: Tue, 3 Feb 2009 22:14:01 +0100 (CET)
From: Paul Buitelaar <Paul.Buitelaar at dfki.de>
Subject: [Corpora-List] 2 PhD positions in Natural Language Processing
Cc: paul.buitelaar at deri.org
2 PhD positions in Natural Language Processing
DERI ? National University of Ireland, Galway
The newly established Unit for Natural Language Processing at the
Digital Enterprise Research Institute (DERI: http://www.deri.ie/) of the
National University of Ireland, Galway invites applications for two PhD
positions.
DERI is a leading research institute in semantic technologies that
offers a stimulating, dynamic and multi-cultural research environment,
excellent ties to research-groups worldwide, close collaboration with
industrial partners and up-to-date infrastructure and resources.
The DERI Unit for Natural Language Processing (http://nlp.deri.ie/) has
a focus on applied research in ontology-based information extraction,
semantic-level text mining and the use of linguistic and semantic
methods in information retrieval. The unit develops methods for the
efficient application of NLP tools in combination with domain semantics
as specified in ontologies, thesauri and other knowledge organisation
systems for relevant use cases. Research is carried out in close
cooperation with the DERI Unit for Information Mining and Retrieval in
the context of the DERI Semantic Information Mining stream (SIM:
http://sim.deri.ie/) as well as with other DERI units.
Candidates should have an excellent university degree in a relevant
field of study, e.g. computer science, computational linguistics,
information science, etc. with an emphasis on natural language
processing. Selected candidates are expected to have the willingness to
combine formal scientific work with application-oriented research and
development in projects funded by national and international (EU)
funding agencies
Please send your application (CV, two letters of reference) in PDF
format to the email address below ? by February 16th, 2009
Further details can be obtained from:
Dr. Paul Buitelaar
Unit for Natural Language Processing
DERI - National University of Ireland, Galway
IDA Business Park,
Lower Dangan,
Galway, Ireland
paul dot buitelaar at deri dot org
------------------------------
Message: 5
Date: Thu, 5 Feb 2009 13:14:31 +0900
From: Sebastian Riedel <sebastian.riedel at gmail.com>
Subject: [Corpora-List] CfP: Workshop on Integer Linear Programming
for NLP at NAACL HLT 2009
To: corpora at hd.uib.no
==========================================================
NAACL HLT 2009 Workshop on
Integer Linear Programming for Natural Language Processing
June 4, 2009, Boulder, Colorado, USA
http://www-tsujii.is.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/ilpnlp/
Call for Papers
(Submission deadline: March 6, 2009)
==========================================================
Integer Linear Programming (ILP) has recently attracted much attention
within the NLP community. Formulating problems using ILP has several
advantages. It allows us to focus on the modelling of problems,
rather than engineering new search algorithms; provides the
opportunity to incorporate generic global constraints; and guarantees
exact inference. This and the availability of off-the-shelf solvers
has lead to a large variety of natural language processing tasks being
formulated in the ILP framework, including semantic role labelling,
syntactic parsing, summarisation and joint information extraction.
The use of ILP brings many benefits and opportunities but there are
still challenges for the community; these include: formulations of new
applications, dealing with large-scale problems and understanding the
interaction between learning and inference at training and decision
time. The purpose of this workshop is to bring together researchers
interested in exploiting ILP for NLP applications and tackling the
issues involved. We are interested in a broad range of topics
including, but not limited to:
- Novel ILP formulations of NLP tasks. This includes: the
introduction of ILP formulations of tasks yet to be tackled within the
framework; and novel formulations, such as equivalent LP relaxations,
that are more efficient to process than previous formulations.
- Learning and Inference. This includes issues relating to:
decoupling of learning (e.g., learning through local classifiers) and
inference, learning with exact (e.g., ILP) or approximate inference,
learning of constraints, learning weights for soft constraints, and
the impact of ignoring various constraints during learning.
- The utility of global hard and soft constraints in NLP. Sometimes
constraints do not increase accuracy (and can even decrease it), when
and why do global constraints become useful? For example, do global
constraints become more important if we have less data?
- Formulating and solving large NLP problems. Applying ILP to hard
problems (such as parsing, machine translation and solving several NLP
tasks at once) often results in very large formulations which can be
impossible to solve directly by the ILP engine. This may require
exploring different ILP solving methods (such as, approximate ILP
solvers/methods) or cutting plane and pricing techniques.
- Alternative declarative approaches. A variety of other modeling
frameworks exist, of which ILP is just one instance. Using other
approaches, such as weighted MAX-SAT, Constraint Satisfaction Problems
(CSP) or Markov Networks, could be more suitable than ILP in some
cases. It can also be helpful to model a problem in one framework
(e.g., Markov Networks) and solve them with another (e.g., ILP) by
using general mappings between representations.
- First Order Modelling Languages. ILP, and other essentially
propositional languages, require the creation of wrapper code to
generate an ILP formulation for each problem instance. First (Higher)
Order languages, such as Learning Based Java and Markov Logic, reduce
this overhead and can also aid the solver to be more efficient.
Moreover, with such languages the automatic exploration of the model
space is easier.
SUBMISSION INFORMATION
We encourage submissions addressing the above questions and topics or
other relevant issues. Authors are invited to submit a full paper of
up to 8 pages (with up to 1 additional page for references), or an
abstract of up to 2 pages. Appropriate topics for abstracts include
preliminary results, application notes, descriptions of work in
progress, etc. Previously published papers cannot be accepted.
The submissions will be reviewed by the program committee. Note that
reviewing will be blind and hence no author information should be
included in the papers. 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 will be accepted on or before 6 March 2009 in PDF format via
the START system at https://www.softconf.com/naacl-hlt09/ILPNLP2009/.
Submissions should follow the NAACL HLT 2009 formatting requirements
for full papers , found at
http://clear.colorado.edu/NAACLHLT2009/stylefiles.html.
IMPORTANT DATES:
March 6, 2009: Submission deadline
March 30, 2009: Notification of acceptance
April 12, 2009: Camera-ready copies due
June 4, 2009: Workshop held in conjunction with NAACL HLT
INVITED SPEAKER: Dan Roth (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
PROGRAM COMMITTEE:
- Dan Roth (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
- Mirella Lapata (University of Edinburgh)
- Scott Yih (Microsoft Research)
- Nick Rizzolo (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
- Ming-Wei Chang (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
- Ivan Meza-Ruiz (University of Edinburgh)
- Ryan McDonald (Google Research)
- Jenny Rose Finkel (Stanford University)
- Pascal Denis (INRIA Paris-Rocquencourt)
- Manfred Klenner (University of Zurich)
- Hal Daume III (University of Utah)
- Daniel Marcu (University of Southern California)
- Kevin Knight (University of Southern California)
- Katja Filippova (EML Research)
- Mark Dras (Macquarie University)
- Hiroya Takamura (Tokyo Institute of Technology)
ORGANIZERS AND CONTACT:
- James Clarke (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
- Sebastian Riedel (University of Tokyo)
Email: ilpnlp2009 at gmail.com
Website: http://www-tsujii.is.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/ilpnlp/
------------------------------
Message: 6
Date: Thu, 5 Feb 2009 14:02:04 +0100
From: Leszek Szyma?ski <l_sz at poczta.fm>
Subject: [Corpora-List] Looking for Internet chat corpora research
To: <corpora at uib.no>
Dear Sir/Madam,
I am currently working on corpus-based research on Internet chat conversations. With reference to this, I am looking for information about research carried out on Internet chat communication with the use of corpus methodology. I am especially interested in English language corpora analyses; however, corpus-based research on other languages will also be appreciated.
Yours sincerely,
Leszek Szymanski
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