31.835, Calls: Comp Ling, Gen Ling, Pragmatics, Semantics, Text/Corpus Ling/Netherlands
The LINGUIST List
linguist at listserv.linguistlist.org
Thu Feb 27 21:07:44 UTC 2020
LINGUIST List: Vol-31-835. Thu Feb 27 2020. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.
Subject: 31.835, Calls: Comp Ling, Gen Ling, Pragmatics, Semantics, Text/Corpus Ling/Netherlands
Moderator: Malgorzata E. Cavar (linguist at linguistlist.org)
Student Moderator: Jeremy Coburn
Managing Editor: Becca Morris
Team: Helen Aristar-Dry, Everett Green, Sarah Robinson, Peace Han, Nils Hjortnaes, Yiwen Zhang, Julian Dietrich
Jobs: jobs at linguistlist.org | Conferences: callconf at linguistlist.org | Pubs: pubs at linguistlist.org
Homepage: http://linguistlist.org
Please support the LL editors and operation with a donation at:
https://funddrive.linguistlist.org/donate/
Editor for this issue: Lauren Perkins <lauren at linguistlist.org>
================================================================
Date: Thu, 27 Feb 2020 16:07:00
From: Kordula De Kuthy [de-kuthy at uni-tuebingen.de]
Subject: WS on Integrating Perspectives on Discourse Annotation
Full Title: WS on Integrating Perspectives on Discourse Annotation
Short Title: DiscAnn
Date: 03-Aug-2020 - 07-Aug-2020
Location: Utrecht, Netherlands
Contact Person: Kordula De Kuthy
Meeting Email: de-kuthy at uni-tuebingen.de
Web Site: https://discannworkshop.github.io/
Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics; General Linguistics; Pragmatics; Semantics; Text/Corpus Linguistics
Call Deadline: 08-Mar-2020
Meeting Description:
The ESSLLI Workshop : Integrating Perspectives on Discourse Annotation will be
held August 3-7, 2020 in Utrecht.
Reflecting the substantial interest in analyzing language beyond the sentence
level in linguistics, computational linguistics, psycholinguistics, and
applied domains, this workshop aims at bringing together researchers from the
various subdisciplines that are working on aspects of discourse annotation.
Advances in formal pragmatics are extending the empirical reach of linguistic
analyses. Computational linguistic research on dialogue and discourse
structure has produced multi-layer corpus annotation efforts such as NXT
Switchboard or the Penn Discourse Treebank. Applications include dialogue
systems and argumentation mining.
This workshop is designed as a joint forum for the range of perspectives
on discourse feeding and complementing each other. This includes research on
the analysis and annotation of:
- discourse relations, be it related to frameworks such as RST, SDRT, or
applications such as argumentation mining, and
- information structural concepts (Topic/Focus, Givenness, Questions under
Discussion).
Equally of interest are methodological issues related to such annotation, such
as reflections on:
- manual annotation, e.g., evaluating annotations schemes and the reliability
of the annotation,
- crowdsourcing annotation, potentially supporting the annotation of some
aspects for larger data sets, and
- the automatic labelling using computational approaches.
Relatedly, we are interested in a discussion of the sources of evidence that
different annotation schemes and annotation methods rely on. Where are
annotations based on linguistic forms (bottom-up observable in the language
data) and where are they grounded in discourse properties (top-down, from
context or task)?
The workshop is designed to foster the interaction and cooperation of
researchers working in different frameworks and using different annotations
methods and document the current state of-the-art in the field of discourse
annotation.
Invited Speaker: Bonnie Webber (U. of Edinburgh)
Call for Papers:
Extended Paper submission deadline: March 8
We invite papers of 4 pages (plus unlimited references) using the short
paper ACL 2020 style templates available for LaTeX and Word at
http://acl2020.org/downloads/acl2020-templates.zip or on Overleaf at
https://overleaf.com/latex/templates/acl-2020-proceedings-template/zsrkcwjptpc
d
Based on the workshop theme, topics of interest include, but are not limited
to:
- the analysis and annotation of discourse relations, be it related to
frameworks such as RST, SDRT, or applications such as argumentation mining
- the analysis and annotation of information structural concepts
(Topic/Focus, Givenness, Questions under Discussion)
- methodological issues, such as reflections on i) manual annotation, e.g.,
evaluating annotations schemes and the reliability of the annotation, ii)
crowdsourcing annotation, potentially supporting the annotation of some
aspects for larger data sets, and iii) the automatic labelling using
computational approaches.
- project descriptions and progress reports for research focused on or
integrating discourse annotation
- tools that support discourse annotation concepts and goals, including
conceptual explorations of wish lists or tool specifications
- research speaking to the gap between qualitative linguistic analysis and
empirically broad analysis of ecologically valid data
While the presentation language at the workshop is English, we encourage
research on a broad range of languages.
Submissions are submitted electronically using EasyChair:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=discann2020
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*************************** LINGUIST List Support ***************************
The 2019 Fund Drive is under way! Please visit https://funddrive.linguistlist.org
to find out how to donate and check how your university, country or discipline
ranks in the fund drive challenges. Or go directly to the donation site:
https://iufoundation.fundly.com/the-linguist-list-2019
Let's make this a short fund drive!
Please feel free to share the link to our campaign:
https://funddrive.linguistlist.org/donate/
----------------------------------------------------------
LINGUIST List: Vol-31-835
----------------------------------------------------------
More information about the LINGUIST
mailing list