6.1548, Calls: Computational Phonology
The Linguist List
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Fri Nov 3 17:41:06 UTC 1995
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LINGUIST List: Vol-6-1548. Fri Nov 3 1995. ISSN: 1068-4875. Lines: 262
Subject: 6.1548, Calls: Computational Phonology
Moderators: Anthony Rodrigues Aristar: Texas A&M U. <aristar at tam2000.tamu.edu>
Helen Dry: Eastern Michigan U. <hdry at emunix.emich.edu>
Associate Editor: Ljuba Veselinova <lveselin at emunix.emich.edu>
Assistant Editors: Ron Reck <rreck at emunix.emich.edu>
Ann Dizdar <dizdar at tam2000.tamu.edu>
Annemarie Valdez <avaldez at emunix.emich.edu>
Software development: John H. Remmers <remmers at emunix.emich.edu>
Editor for this issue: dseely at emunix.emich.edu (T. Daniel Seely)
---------------------------------Directory-----------------------------------
1)
Date: Fri, 03 Nov 1995 11:07:15 EST
From: sigphon at sunk.research.att.com (maildrop for rws)
---------------------------------Messages------------------------------------
1)
Date: Fri, 03 Nov 1995 11:07:15 EST
From: sigphon at sunk.research.att.com (maildrop for rws)
SIGPHON 96 -- CALL FOR PAPERS
2nd Meeting of the Special Interest Group in Computational Phonology
"COMPUTATIONAL PHONOLOGY IN SPEECH TECHNOLOGY"
Friday, June 28, 1996
in conjunction with the 34th Annual Meeting of the
Association for Computational Linguistics
University of California, Santa Cruz
Santa Cruz, California, USA
Sponsored by the Association for Computational Linguistics
FOCUS OF THE WORKSHOP
As anyone who has worked on both computational linguistics and speech
technology can attest, there often seems to be a large gulf between
the two communities of researchers, making it difficult sometimes for
work that is of potential interest to both communities, to be fully
appreciated in either. Nowhere is this more true than in areas related
to phonology and phonetics. Speech researchers working on speech
recognition or speech synthesis have traditionally had little interest
in the theoretical issues involved in building, for example,
grapheme-to-phoneme conversion systems. Computational phonologists,
on the other hand, have usually been more concerned with the
relationship between computational models of phonology and theoretical
phonology than they have in seemingly more mundane applications of
their results. In recent years, however, there has been an increasing
body of work that is informed by ideas and methods of both
computational phonology and speech technology. This workshop will
provide an excellent opportunity to air such work as well as to make
contact between the speech and computational linguistics communities.
Papers are solicited that demonstrate the application of ideas from
theoretical or computational phonology in practical speech
applications, including, but not limited to, text-to-speech synthesis,
and speech recognition; also welcome are papers that can demonstrate
implications for (computational) phonology of results in speech
technology.
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Chair: Richard Sproat, AT&T Bell Laboratories
Members: John Coleman, Oxford University
Mark Ellison, University of Edinburgh
Andras Kornai, IBM Almaden Research Center
Alex Monaghan, Dublin City University
Colin Wightman, New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology
WORKHOP STRUCTURE
The workshop will be a full-day event consisting of about 12 half-hour
papers, selected by the program committee.
REQUIREMENTS & SUBMISSIONS
Papers should describe unique work; completed work is preferable to
intended work, but in any event the paper should clearly indicate the
state of completion of the reported results. Papers must not exceed
3200 words (exclusive of references). Overlength papers may be
rejected without review.
Due to tight time constraints, initial submissions and reviewing will
be handled exclusively electronically. The initial submission may
either be in PLAIN ASCII, or else should be a UUENCODED LATEX FILE
following the ACL submission style (aclsub.sty) retrievable from the
ACL LISTSERV server (access to which is described below), which
requires TeX 3.14 or LaTeX 2.09 or higher. A model submission
modelsub.tex is also provided in the archive, as well as bibliography
style files fullname.sty and fullname.bst. (Note, however, that the
bibliography for a submission should not be submitted as a separate
.bib file; the bibliography entries should be inserted in the
submitted LaTeX source file.) Postscript figures following psfig.sty
may be included. Submissions that include separate postscript figure
files must be packaged using the aclpkg.script (also available from
the LISTSERV). No other style files, besides the standard TeX
3.14/LaTeX 2.09 ones and the ones mentioned above, should be used.
The first page of the submission should be a title page containing the
title, a short (5 line) abstract, and author names and addresses.
Ascii or uuencoded latex submissions should be sent via email to:
sigphon at research.att.com
(For ascii files, please ensure no lines are longer than 80
characters, as some mailers insert linebreaks.) Submissions should
include the following information, formatted as follows:
To: sigphon at research.att.com
Subject: SIGPHON 96 Submission
--text follows this line--
title: <title of submission>
authors: <authors as they appear on the title page>
abstract: <copy of abstract as it appears on the title page>
word count:
email: <email address of author to whom correspondence should be directed>
----------------------------body------------------------------
<Body of submission>
Notification of receipt will be sent to the email address listed in
the "email:" slot of the message soon after receipt of the submission.
Final papers that have been accepted for inclusion in the workshop
should be sent in camera-ready form, prepared in a double-column
format following the ACL proceedings style, which is available from
the LISTSERV (at the time of writing in the directory
/acl-l/Styfiles/Proceedings). Final papers must be accompanied by a
signed copyright release statement, transferring copyright to the
Association for Computational Linguistics. Final papers should be sent
to:
SIGPHON 96
c/o Richard Sproat
AT&T Bell Laboratories, Room 2d-451
600 Mountain Avenue
Murray Hill, NJ 07974, USA
IMPORTANT DATES
MARCH 1, 1996 Initial submissions to sigphon at research.att.com
APRIL 3, 1996 Notification of acceptance
MAY 1, 1996 Receipt of final accepted papers
Late papers cannot be considered.
GENERAL SUBMISSION QUESTIONS
email to sigphon at research.att.com
COST OF THE WORKSHOP
Regular Student
Early registration (by May 1, 1996): US$ 40 30
Late registration (May 1, 1996 - June 20, 1996): US$ 45 35
On-site registration: US$ 50 40
Price of workshop includes proceedings, coffee breaks and a boxed
lunch. We request that information on any special dietary
requirements be provided on the enclosed registration form.
Payment may be made either by check in US$ made out to the
"Association for Computational Linguistics", or by Visa or Mastercard.
AUDIO-VISUAL NEEDS.
An overhead projector will be available. Requests for other A/V
equipment should be directed to sigphon at research.att.com
ACL LISTSERV
LISTSERV is a facility set up at Columbia University's Department of
Computer Science to allow access to an electronic document archive by
electronic mail. Requests for files from the archive should be sent as
e-mail messages to:
listserv at cs.columbia.edu
with an empty subject field and the message body containing the
request command. The most useful requests are "help" for general help
on using LISTSERV, "index ACL96" for the current contents of the ACL
archive and "get ACL96 <file>" to get a particular file named <file>
from the archive. For example, to get the ACL96 modelsub.tex file,
send a message with the following body:
get acl-l/ACL96 modelsub.tex
Answers to requests are returned by e-mail. Since the server may have many
requests for different archives to process, requests are queued up and may take
awhile (say, overnight) to be fulfilled. The ACL archive can also be accessed
by anonymous FTP. Here is an example of how to get the same file by FTP:
$ ftp ftp.cs.columbia.edu
Name(ftp.cs.columbia.edu:trisha): anonymous
Password:trisha at cis.upenn.edu < not echoed >
ftp> cd acl-l/ACL96
ftp> get modelsub.tex.Z
ftp> quit
$ uncompress modelsub.tex.Z
- ---------------------------cut here-------------------------------------
SIGPHON 96: "COMPUTATIONAL PHONOLOGY IN SPEECH TECHNOLOGY"
REGISTRATION FORM
Name:
Affiliation:
Regular Mail Address:
Phone:
Fax:
EMAIL:
[ ] I (intend to submit/have submitted) a paper.
[ ] I am a student
[ ] I will pay by check in US dollars made payable to
"Association for Computational Linguistics" (see below for
mailing address)
<early registration (prior to May 1, 1996)
US$40 for regular attendees, US$30 for students
late registration (May 1, 1996 - June 20, 1996)
US$45 for regular attendees, US35 for students>
[ ] I will pay by VISA/MASTERCARD
Card #:
Name on card:
Expiration date:
[ ] I will pay on site
on-site registration will be $50/$40
[ ] I have special dietary requirements (vegetarian, ...): ___________
Please return this form via email to sigphon at research.att.com
with the Subject line "SIGPHON 96 Registration"
Send checks to:
SIGPHON 96
c/o Richard Sproat
AT&T Bell Laboratories, Room 2d-451
600 Mountain Avenue
Murray Hill, NJ 07974, USA
- ---------------------------cut here-------------------------------------
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