[Lingtyp] ComputEL-4: 2nd Call-for-Papers (REVISED: virtual workshop + timeline)

Antti Arppe arppe at ualberta.ca
Wed Jun 17 17:29:43 UTC 2020


[Apologies for cross-postings]

ComputEL-4

Fourth Workshop on the Use of Computational Methods in the Study of 
Endangered Languages

2nd Call-for-Papers -- WITH IMPORTANT CHANGES (VIRTUAL WORKSHOP + 
REVISED TIMELINE)

The ComputEL-4 workshop will focus on the use of computational methods 
in the study, support, and revitalization of endangered languages. The 
primary aim of the workshop is to continue narrowing the gap between 
computational linguists interested in working on methods for endangered 
languages, field linguists working on documenting these languages, and 
the language communities who are striving to maintain their languages.

We take seriously the goal of reaching all relevant communities. To 
support this goal, ComputEL aims to alternate co-location with 
computational linguistics conferences and language documentation 
conferences.

Workshop format/venue and the COVID-19 pandemic

ComputEL-4 will take place on March 2-3, 2021, immediately preceding the 
7th International Conference on Language Documentation and Conservation 
(ICLDC7) hosted by the University of Hawaii. Due to the COVID-19 
pandemic and in line with the current plans for ICLDC7, we expect that 
ComputEL-4 will be held as a fully virtual workshop. Submission and 
notification deadlines have changed to reflect this.

Call for Papers

Papers are invited which explore the interface and intersection of 
computational linguistics, documentary linguistics, and community-based 
language revitalization and conservation efforts. The committee 
encourages submissions which:

(i) examine the use of specific methods in the analysis of data from 
low-resource languages, with a focus on endangered languages, or propose 
new methods for analysis of such data,

(ii) propose new models for the collection, management, and deployment 
of data in endangered language settings, or

(iii) consider what concrete steps are required to allow for a more 
fruitful interaction between computer scientists, documentary linguists, 
and language communities.

The intention of the workshop is not merely to allow for the 
presentation of research, but also to continue building a network of 
computational linguists, documentary linguists, and community language 
activists who are able to effectively join together and serve their 
common interests.

Presentations

We will have both oral presentation sessions and a poster session, but 
we will be working on how these are realized in practice in our now 
virtual workshop. The decision on whether a presentation will be oral or 
poster will be made by the Organizing Committee on the advice of the 
Program Committee, taking into account the subject matter and how the 
content might be best conveyed. Oral and poster presentations will not 
be distinguished in the Proceedings.

Submissions

In line with our goal of reaching different academic communities, we 
offer two different modes of submission: extended abstract and full 
paper. Either can be submitted to our two tracks: (a) language community 
perspective and (b) academic perspective. The mode of submission does 
not influence likelihood of acceptance.

Submissions must be uploaded via Easychair 
<https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=computel4>(https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=computel4) 
no later than September 30, 2020, 11:59PM (UTC-11, time zone of American 
Samoa). Please indicate clearly (in the Abstract) which of the two modes 
(Extended abstractor Full paper) you are submitting to.

All submissions must be anonymous and will be peer-reviewed by the 
scientific committee. Notification of acceptance will be sent out by 
mid-November 2020.

A. Extended abstract:

Please submit anonymous abstracts of up to 1500 words.

B. Full paper:

Please submit anonymously either a) long papers (max. 8 pages plus 
references) or b) short papers (max. 4 pages plus references) according 
to the style and formatting guidelines provided our ComputeEL Style 
Files (with template files for both LaTeX and Microsoft Word: see: 
https://computel-workshop.org/computel4-submissions/). Authors will be 
allowed one extra page for the final version (altogether 5 and 9 pages) 
excluding references.

Proceedings

The authors of selected accepted full papers (long or short) will be 
invited by the Organizing Committee to submit their papers for online 
publication via the open-access ACL Anthology. All other accepted full 
papers (long and short) and extended abstracts will be published 
electronically in University of Colorado Boulder Scholar 
(https://scholar.colorado.edu/scil-cmel/). Final versions of long and 
short papers will be allotted one additional page (altogether 5 and 9 
pages) excluding references. Extended abstracts will be allotted up to 5 
pages (according to the short paper format) excluding references. Any 
revisionsshould concern responses to reviewer comments or the addition 
of relevant details and clarifications, but not entirely new, unreviewed 
content.Proceedings papers should be revised and improved versions of 
the version that was submitted for, and which underwent, review. 
Camera-ready versions of the articles for publication will be due on 
January 25, 2021.

Important Dates (REVISED):

Mon30-September-2020  Deadline for submission of papers or short abstracts

Wed15-November-2020  Notification of acceptance

Tue-Wed 2-3-March-2021  Workshop


Endorsements:

ComputEL-4 is endorsed by the ACL Special Interest Group for Endangered 
Languages (SIGEL: https://acl-sigel.github.io/), and the ELRA/ISCA 
Special Interest Group for Under-resources Languages (SIGUL: 
http://www.elra.info/en/sig/sigul/).


Organizing Committee

Antti Arppe (University of Alberta)

Jeff Good (University at Buffalo)

Atticus Harrigan (University of Alberta): community track

Mans Hulden (University Colorado Boulder)

Jordan Lachler (University Alberta)

Sarah Moeller (University of Colorado Boulder): general/computational track

Alexis Palmer (University of North Texas)

Lane Schwartz (University of Illinois)

Miikka Silfverberg (University of British Columbia)


Contact - website and email

For further information, please consult our website: 
https://computel-workshop.org/computel-4/<https://computel-workshop.org/computel4/>

or email us at:

computel.workshop at gmail.com <mailto:computel.workshop at gmail.com>


Previous workshops

The first ComputEL workshop was co-located with ACL in June 2014 in 
Baltimore; ComputEL-2 was co-located with the 5th International 
Conference of Language Documentation and Conservation (ICLDC5) in 
Honolulu, Hawai’i, in March 2017; ComputEL-3 was co-located with the 6th 
International Conference of Language Documentation and Conservation 
(ICLDC6) in Honolulu, Hawai’i, in March 2019. The proceedings of the 
previous ComputEL workshops have been published online by ACL and 
University of Colorado Boulder Scholar. For further information, see: 
https://computel-workshop.org/




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