[Corpora-List] 2nd CfP: NoDaLiDa 2013 workshop on Lexical semantic resources for NLP
Lars Borin
lars.borin at svenska.gu.se
Mon Feb 25 11:57:50 UTC 2013
Pre-conference workshop at NoDaLiDa 2013, Oslo, 22nd May 2013
Lexical semantic resources for NLP
WS website: <http://spraakbanken.gu.se/eng/nodalida-lexsem-ws-2013>
Second call for papers
High-quality lexical semantic resources with sufficiently large
vocabularies still prove to be a serious bottleneck not only in purely
rule-based NLP applications but also in supervised corpus-based
approaches. The oldest widely-known lexical semantic resource, Princeton
WordNet (PWN), has been around for over two decades. While PWN and the
numerous wordnet projects for other languages that it has inspired
adhere fairly closely to the traditional dictionary in their conception
and organization, there are also lexical-semantic resources where a
closer integration of lexical data information and corpus data is
attempted. Such resources can be seen either as extremely richly
exemplified lexicons or extremely deeply annotated corpora, depending on
your outlook. Berkeley FrameNet, VerbNet, PropBank and several others
can be mentioned in this connnection. A recent trend in the wake of the
increased awareness of the importance of standardization and
interoperability of language resources, is the development towards
large-scale integration of lexical resources (variously referred to as
“lexical cores”, “lexical macroresources”, “lexical resource networks”,
and the like) both within and across languages, the ultimate expression
of which is at the moment the linked open data in linguistics movement.
For largely extraneous reasons, English-language resources tend to
receive most attention in the LT literature, but there is an increasing
number of lexical semantic resources under development for many other
languages, including Nordic, Baltic and other languages of the NEALT area.
In parallel to this development of new lexical semantic resources, much
effort is put into exploring how such resources and formal ontologies
can be made to work together in knowledge-based systems. The workshop –
a follow-up on the succesful Nodalida 2009 workshop where the focus was
on wordnets – intends to bring together researchers involved in building
and integrating lexical semantic resources for NLP as well as
researchers that are more theoretically interested in investigating the
interplay between lexical semantics, lexicography, terminology and
formal ontologies.
We invite papers presenting original research relating to lexical
semantic resources for NLP on topics such as:
representation of lexical-semantic knowledge for computational use
the interplay between formal ontologies and lexical resources
corpus-based approaches to lexical semantic resources
terminology and lexical semantics: concept-based vs lexical
semantic approaches
monolingual vs. multilingual approaches to lexical-semantic
resources and ontologies
word-space models for building and expanding ontologies
domain-specific classification: taxonomy and ontology –
computational aspects
quality assessment of lexical-semantic resources: criteria, methods
computational use of lexical-semantic resources (information
retrieval, semantic tagging of corpora, MT, etc.)
traditional lexicography and NLP lexicons: re-use and differences
cognitive aspects: computational lexical models as opposed to the
‘mental lexicon’
Submission
Papers should conform to the main Nodalida stylesheet .
Submissions must be anonymous, i.e. not reveal author(s) on the title
page or through self-references. Papers must be submitted digitally, in
PDF, and uploaded through the on-line conference system. Paper
submissions that violate either of these requirements will be returned
without review.
The page limit for submissions is up to fourteen pages of text, plus
unlimited additional pages with bibliographic references. Please note
that NoDaLiDa 2013 adapts a single-column, smaller page format,
optimized for on-screen reading. In terms of actual word counts, this
page limit corresponds to approximately eight pages in a ‘classic’,
two-column conference proceedings layout.
All submissions to the workshop must be uploaded electronically,
following the above requirements. All submissions will be reviewed by
the program committee. All accepted papers will be collected into a
proceedings volume to be submitted for publication in the NEALT
Proceeding Series (Linköping Electronic Conference Proceedings).
Important dates
18th March: paper submission to EasyChair
11th April: notification of acceptance
25th April: camera-ready papers for publication. You are also
required to submit the NEALT transfer of copyright agreement with your
final submission.
22nd May: Workshop
Invited speaker
Graeme Hirst (University of Toronto)
Workshop organizers
Lars Borin (University of Gothenburg; Organizing chair)
Ruth E. Vatvedt Fjeld (University of Oslo)
Markus Forsberg (University of Gothenburg)
Sanni Nimb (Association for Danish Language and Literature)
Pierre Nugues (Lund University)
Bolette Sandford Pedersen (University of Copenhagen)
Program committee
Lars Borin (University of Gothenburg)
Ruth E. Vatvedt Fjeld (University of Oslo)
Markus Forsberg (University of Gothenburg)
Karin Friberg Heppin (University of Gothenburg)
Richard Johansson (University of Gothenburg)
Rune Lain Knudsen (University of Oslo)
Dimitrios Kokkinakis (University of Gothenburg)
André Lynum (University of Oslo)
Sanni Nimb (Association for Danish Language and Literature)
Pierre Nugues (Lund University)
Bolette Sandford Pedersen (University of Copenhagen)
Joel Priestley (University of Oslo)
For all inquiries, please email Lars Borin <lars dot borin at svenska
dot gu dot se>.
_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE from this page: http://mailman.uib.no/options/corpora
Corpora mailing list
Corpora at uib.no
http://mailman.uib.no/listinfo/corpora
More information about the Corpora
mailing list