13.121, Calls: Computational Ling, Morphology & Phonology

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LINGUIST List:  Vol-13-121. Sat Jan 19 2002. ISSN: 1068-4875.

Subject: 13.121, Calls: Computational Ling, Morphology & Phonology

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            Helen Dry, Eastern Michigan U. <hdry at linguistlist.org>
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	Michael Appleby, EMU		Marie Klopfenstein, WSU
	Ljuba Veselinova, Stockholm U.	Heather Taylor-Loring, EMU
	Dina Kapetangianni, EMU		Richard Harvey, EMU
	Karolina Owczarzak, EMU		Renee Galvis, WSU

Software: John Remmers, E. Michigan U. <remmers at emunix.emich.edu>
          Gayathri Sriram, E. Michigan U. <gayatri at linguistlist.org>

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=================================Directory=================================

1)
Date:  Fri, 18 Jan 2002 16:43:23 EST
From:  Priscilla Rasmussen <rasmusse at cs.rutgers.edu>
Subject:  ACL-02 Workshop CFP: Computational Approaches to Semitic Languages

2)
Date:  Fri, 18 Jan 2002 16:52:39 EST
From:  Priscilla Rasmussen <rasmusse at cs.rutgers.edu>
Subject:  ACL-02 Workshop CFP: Morphological and Phonological Learning

-------------------------------- Message 1 -------------------------------

Date:  Fri, 18 Jan 2002 16:43:23 EST
From:  Priscilla Rasmussen <rasmusse at cs.rutgers.edu>
Subject:  ACL-02 Workshop CFP: Computational Approaches to Semitic Languages

WORKSHOP ANNOUNCEMENT
First Call for Papers

Computational Approaches to Semitic Languages

ACL-2002
University of Pennsylvania
Thursday 11 July, 2002

This workshop is a sequel to the workshop on Computational Approaches
to Semitic Languages that was held at COLING98 in Montreal. Since that
time, there have been various other workshops, but these have mostly
turned out to be either rather applications-oriented, or rather
language specific, or both. Whilst not neglecting applications, the
present workshop aims to attract submissions that contribute
significantly to theoretical insights concerning computational
frameworks underlying the processing of Semitic languages in
general. Morphology and/or phonology would seem to be promising areas
of investigation in this sense. An effort will also be made to
highlight submissions that concern a representative set of languages.

Areas of interest include (but are not limited to):

-  Orthographic Representation
-  Morphological/Phonological Models
-  Speech Applications
-  Syntax, Parsing and Generation
-  Semantics
-  Acquisition of Language Resources
-  Corpora
-  Use of Machine Learning Techniques
-  Multilingual / Mixed Language Applications
-  Information Retrieval and Extraction

Program Committee

  Michael Rosner, University of Malta, Malta (co-chair), mike.rosner at um.edu.mt
  Shuly Wintner, University of Haifa, Israel (co-chair), shuly at cs.haifa.ac.il
  Ken Beesley, XRCE, France, ken.beesley at xrce.xerox.com
  Achraf Chalabi, SAKHR Software, Cairo, Egypt, ac at sakhr.com
  Yaacov Choueka, Bar Ilan University, Israel, yco636sc at netvision.net.il
  Anne De Roeck, Open University, UK, A.DeRoeck at open.ac.uk
  Martha Evens, Illinois Institute of Technology, US, evens at iit.edu
  Ray Fabri, University of Malta, Malta, rfab1 at um.edu.mt
  Salem Ghazali, IRSIT, Tunisia, ghazali at irsit.rnrt.tn
  Alon Itai, The Technion, Haifa, Israel, itai at cs.technion.ac.il
  Steven Krauwer, University of Utrecht, Netherlands, steven.krauwer at let.uu.nl
  Mounira Loughraieb, University of Nancy 2, France,
  mounira.loughraieb at clsh.univ-nancy2.fr
  Chadia Moghrabi, University of Moncton, mograc at umoncton.ca
  Mustafa Yaseen, Amman University, Jordan, myaseen at cbj.gov.jo
  Remi Zajac, New Mexico State University, US, rzajac at crl.nmsu.edu
  Adnane Zribi, University of Tunis, Tunisia, adn at gnet.tn

Important dates

  February 24, 2002: Deadline for submissions
  April 7, 2002: Notification of acceptance
  May 1, 2002: Final version due
  July 11, 2002: Workshop date

Home Page and Further Details

  http://www.cs.um.edu.mt/~mros/WSL




-------------------------------- Message 2 -------------------------------

Date:  Fri, 18 Jan 2002 16:52:39 EST
From:  Priscilla Rasmussen <rasmusse at cs.rutgers.edu>
Subject:  ACL-02 Workshop CFP: Morphological and Phonological Learning

                     Workshop on
        Morphological and Phonological Learning

                  Philadelphia, PA
                    12 July 2001

                 Sixth Meeting of the
   ACL Special Interest Group in Computational Phonology
                in cooperation with
  ACL Special Interest Group in Natural Language Learning




                    Motivation

Two groups of researchers are converging on the need to construct
morphologies and phonologies of low density languages.

Natural language engineers hope to develop machine translation, speech
recognition, and other NLP technologies for these languages.
Meanwhile, linguists and native speakers want to document the
languages for scientific or humanitarian reasons.  (This need is often
expressed concerning endangered languages, but is not restricted to
that situation.)

This convergence of interests makes it an opportune time to meet to
discuss ways to analyze the morphology and phonology of a language (or
a group of related languages) more quickly (and perhaps more
accurately) than traditional methods have allowed.

Techniques for morphology and phonology learning may vary in the
amount of human involvement they require.  At one end of the spectrum
are tools intended to help a native speaker (perhaps with the aid of a
linguist) describe his or her own language.  At the other end are
tools for unsupervised machine learning from texts.  Intermediate or
hybrid approaches are also possible.

Methodologies to be discussed in this workshop need not be fully
general: for example, a tool might be best suited to agglutinating,
fusional, or polysynthetic languages, or specialized for compounding
or reduplication.

The Workshop on Morphological and Phonological Learning will be held
July 12 2002, immediately after the ACL-02 meetings at the University
of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia Pennsylvania, USA.

More information about SIGPHON is available at
http://www.cogsci.ed.ac.uk/sigphon, and about SIGNLL at
http://ilk.kub.nl/~signll/.  The ACL-2002 website is
http://www.acl2002.org.




                Topics

o Tools to help a native speaker or linguist visualize and describe
    the morphology and/or phonology of a language

o Tools for (semi-)automated discovery of morphology and/or phonology

o Databases and annotation tools designed for morphological or
    phonological information, particularly as these relate to learning

o Resources for learning (taggers, seed grammars and lexicons,
    partially annotated text, bilingual text, etc.)

o Linguistic (knowledge-based) approaches vs. empirical approaches;
    hybrid methodologies

o Evaluation/comparison of morphology learning technologies

o Adapting and reusing grammars and lexicons among related languages

o Application of learned morphologies and phonologies (proofreading,
    machine translation, linguistic research, documentation of endangered
    languages, speech recognition)

o Theoretical results on learnability or representation






            Program Committee

o   Mike Maxwell (Linguistic Data Consortium, chair)
o   Antal van den Bosch (Tilburg University, SIGNLL)
o   Jason Eisner (Johns Hopkins University)
o   Steven Bird (University of Pennsylvania)
o   Lauri Karttunen (Parc Inc.)
o   John A. Goldsmith (University of Chicago)

Invited Speaker: David Yarowsky, Johns Hopkins University




                Submission Format and Instructions

Submissions must be in English, and should be full-length papers, up
to a maximum of 10 pages. (The final version in the proceedings should
incorporate reviewers' suggestions and may be up to 12 pages.) Except
for length, papers should adhere to the two-column format prescribed
by ACL'2002 Please see http://www.cs.ualberta.ca/~lindek/acl02/style/
for the detailed guidelines.

Submissions should be sent electronically in Word, PDF or ASCII text
format to arrive no later than April 15, 2002 to Mike Maxwell
(maxwell at ldc.upenn.edu).  The body of the email should give title,
author(s), abstract, and contact information.  The subject line should
be "Morphology/ Phonology Learning Workshop."

The workshop papers will be published in both electronic and hard-copy
form.

While electronic submission is strongly preferred, if for some reason
you are not able to submit electronically, contact Mike Maxwell
concerning hard-copy submission.

Completed work is preferable to intended work, but in any event the
paper should clearly indicate the state of completion of the reported
results.  Submissions will be evaluated on the basis of their
relevance, innovation, quality, and presentation according to the
schedule below.  The program chair may invite additional reviewers as
necessary to obtain relevant expertise and avoid conflicts of
interest.

Authors will be expected to archive their final papers in the
Computation and Language section of arXiv.org, and to submit pointers
to the archived paper when submitting their camera-ready copy.



                Schedule

o   Submission Deadline:       5 April 2002
o   Notification:             25 April 2002
o   Camera-ready Copy Due:    21 May 2002
o   Workshop:                 12 July 2002




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