Corpora: ANLP/NAACL2000 Workshop Call for Papers

From: Priscilla Rasmussen (rasmusse@cs.rutgers.edu)
Date: Mon Jan 24 2000 - 18:24:12 MET

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      Syntactic and Semantic Complexity in Natural Language Processing Systems

            Workshop to be held in conjunction with ANLP-NAACL2000

                        Date: Sunday, April 30 2000

                            Seattle, Washington.

    WORKSHOP DESCRIPTION
    The last decade has seen an explosion in the work done in the development
    of robust natural language processing systems. A common methodology used in
    building these systems has been to analyze a sample of the data available
    (either manually, or automatically for training statistical systems), build
    statistical/heuristical schemas based upon the analysis, and test the system
    on a blind sample of the data. Due to this commonly used paradigm, an
    important area of research that has not been given the attention it deserves is
    the estimation of syntactic and semantic complexity faced by these systems in
    the tasks they perform.

    At the AAAI 1999 Fall Symposium on Question Answering Systems, the problem of
    semantic complexity, a topic of a 90 minutes panel, motivated a lot of interest
    and discussion. To continue the investigation of this important issue, in this
    workshop, we will address the question of complexity as it pertains to the
    syntax and semantics of natural language. In particular, the workshop will
    seek to address the following areas:

    1) How can we model syntactic and semantic complexity for formal models of
       natural language?
    2) How does complexity impact acquisition of semantic and conceptual
       information?
    3) How does syntactic and semantic complexity impact document classification in
       information and text retrieval tasks?
    4) How do statistical clustering approaches compare to knowledge-based
       approaches at partitioning and quantifying the semantic space in a document
       set?
    5) Concerning NLP systems that are deployed in the field, how can we quantify
       the information extraction task and QA task in ways similar to what is
       currently done with IR tasks and algorithms?
    6) How does the estimation of syntactic and semantic complexity impact the
       evaluation of such systems?
    7) Can syntactic and semantic complexity coupled with a history of the past
       performance of a system be used to predict future performance of the system
       on a different data set?

    The workshop invites short papers, full-length papers, proposals for panel
    discussions, and position statements that deal with any aspect of syntactic
    and/or semantic complexity of NLP systems. In particular, the workshop is
    interested in addressing the following topics:
        - estimation of the syntactic and semantic complexity of specific NLP tasks
        - semantic complexity and world knowledge
        - role of syntactic and semantic complexity in system design and testing
        - syntactic and semantic complexity and its role in the evaluation of NLP
          systems
        - use of syntactic and semantic complexity as a performance predictor
        - relationship between syntactic and semantic complexity

    FORMAT FOR SUBMISSION

    Paper submissions should consist of either a short paper (2000 words or less,
    including references), a position statement (2000 words or less, including
    references), or a full paper (5000 words or less, including references). Each
    submission should include a separate title page providing the following
    information: the title, the type of paper (short/position/full), the word
    count, a short abstract, names and affiliations of all the authors, the full
    address of the primary author (or alternate contact person), including phone,
    fax, and email. Proposals for panels should consist of a short (upto 500
    words) description of the proposed panel along with the names of the proposed
    panelists.

    Papers and proposals for panel discussions may be submitted by submitting three
    hard copies or one soft copy (ASCII, or PS) to:

    Amit Bagga
    General Electric CRD
    Room K1-5C38B
    1 Research Circle
    Niskayuna, NY 12309. USA
    phone: 1-518-387-7077
    email: bagga@crd.ge.com

    IMPORTANT DATES

    Paper submission deadline: February 14
    Notification of acceptance of panels : February 21
    Notification of acceptance of papers : February 28
    Camera ready papers due: March 13

    ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
    Co-Chairs:
    Amit Bagga
    General Electric Corporate Research and Development
    P.O. Box 8
    Schenectady, NY 12301
    bagga@crd.ge.com
    518-387-7077 (voice)
    518-387-6845 (fax)

    James Pustejovsky
    Computer Science Department and Volen Center for Complex Systems
    Brandeis University
    Waltham, MA 02254-9110
    jamesp@cs.brandeis.edu
    781-736-2709 (voice)
    781-736-2741 (fax)

    Wlodek Zadrozny
    IBM T.J. Watson Research Center
    30 Saw Mill River Road
    Hawthorne, NY 10532
    wlodz@us.ibm.com
    914-784-7835 (voice)
    914-784-7455 (fax)

    PROGRAM COMMITTEE:
    Amit Bagga - GE CRD
    Branimir Boguraev - IBM T.J. Watson Research Center
    J-P Chanod - Xerox, Grenoble
    Shalom Lappin - Kings College, London
    Aravind Joshi - University of Pennsylvania
    Larry Moss - Indiana
    Rohit Parikh - CUNY
    Adam Pease - Teknowledge
    James Pustejovsky - Brandeis University
    Wlodek Zadrozny - IBM T.J. Watson Research Center



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