Corpora: Reminder: Computational Linguistics Special Issue on Anaphora and Ellipsis Resolution

From: Ruslan Mitkov (R.Mitkov@wlv.ac.uk)
Date: Fri Mar 10 2000 - 19:26:04 MET

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    *** Reminder: Submission Deadline is 1 April 2000 ***

                                  Call for Papers

    Special Issue of Computational Linguistics: Anaphora and Ellipsis Resolution

    Guest editors: Ruslan Mitkov, Branimir Boguraev, Shalom Lappin

    Anaphora and ellipsis both account for cohesion in text and are phenomena
    of active study in formal and computational linguistics alike. The
    correct interpretation of anaphora and ellipsis, as well as the
    understanding of the relationship between them, is vital for Natural
    Language Processing.

    After considerable initial research, and after years of relative silence
    in the early eighties, these issues have attracted the attention of many
    researchers in the last 10 years and much promising work on the topic has
    been reported. Discourse-orientated theories and formalisms such as DRT
    and Centering have inspired new research on the computational treatment
    of anaphora. The drive towards corpus-based robust NLP solutions has
    further stimulated interest, for alternative and/or data-enriched
    approaches. In addition, application-driven research in areas such as
    automatic abstracting and information extraction, has independently
    identified the importance of (and boosted the research in) anaphora and
    coreference resolution. Ellipsis resolution too, being of particular
    importance to a number of Natural Language Understanding applications
    such as dialogue and discourse processing, has received increasing
    attention. The growing interest in anaphora and ellipsis resolution has
    been demonstrated clearly over the last 4--5 years through the MUC
    coreference task projects and at a number of related fora (workshops,
    conferences, etc.).

    Against this background of expanding research and growing interest, this
    special issue offers the opportunity for a high quality, and timely,
    collection of papers on anaphora and ellipsis resolution.

    Topics

    The call for papers invites submissions of papers describing recent novel
    and challenging work/results in anaphora and ellipsis resolution.
    The range of topics to be covered will include, but will not be limited
    to:

      o new anaphora and ellipsis resolution algorithms,
      o factors in anaphora resolution: salience and interaction of factors,
      o techniques in ellipsis resolution,
      o use of theories and formalisms in anaphora resolution,
      o use of theories and formalisms in ellipsis resolution,
      o applications of anaphora/coreference resolution,
      o applications of ellipsis resolution,
      o multilingual anaphora resolution,
      o evaluation issues,
      o use/production of annotated corpora for anaphora and ellipsis.

    In addition, we expect papers addressing various issues of debate related
    to the resolution of anaphora and ellipsis, such as:

      o Is it possible to propose a core set of factors used in anaphora
         resolution?
      o When dealing with real data, is it at all possible to posit
         "constraints", or should all factors be regarded as "preferences"?
      o What is the case for languages other than English?
      o What degree of preference (weight) should be given to "preferential"
         factors? How should weights best be determined? What empirical
         data can be brought to bear on this?
      o What would be an optimal order for the application of multiple
         factors? Would this affect the scoring strategies used in selecting
         the antecedent?
      o Is it realistic to expect high precision over unrestricted texts?
      o Is it realistic to determine anaphoric links in corpora
         automatically?
      o Are all CL applications 'equal' with respect to their requirements
         from an anaphora resolution module? What kind(s) of compromises
         might be possible, depending on the NLP task, and how would
         awareness of these affect the tuning of a resolution algorithm for
         particular type(s) of input text?
      o Should ellipsis resolution be handled by syntactic or semantic
         reconstruction?
      o Is it necessary to retrieve both syntactic and semantic properties of
         the antecedent in the reconstructed representation of the elided
         structure?

    Finally, we invite discussion on various open questions from both
    theoretical and computational point of view such as whether we should
    construe ellipsis as entirely distinct from anaphora.

    Submissions and Reviewing

    The submission deadline is 1 April 2000. Authors can submit either
    electronically or send 6 hard copies of their paper (for format and style
    details, see http://www.aclweb.org/cl) to:

      Ruslan Mitkov (R.Mitkov@wlv.ac.uk)
      School of Humanities, Languages and Social Sciences
      University of Wolverhampton
      Stafford St.
      Wolverhampton WV1 1SB
      United Kingdom

    Please note that in addition to the submission, a 100-word abstract and
    details of the author (following the format given at
    http://www.aclweb.org/cl/submit.txt) should be emailed to R.Mitkov.

    Each submission will be reviewed both by experts appointed by the editor
    of the journal and by members of the guest editorial board of the special
    issue. In addition to the guest editors,

      Ruslan Mitkov (University of Wolverhampton),
      Branimir Boguraev (IBM Research, Yorktown Heights) and
      Shalom Lappin (University of London),

    the guest editorial board includes the following members:

      Nicholas Asher (University of Texas),
      Amit Bagga (GE CRD),
      Claire Cardie (Cornell University),
      David Carter (Speech Machines, Malvern),
      Eugene Charniak (Brown University),
      Walter Daelemans (University of Antwerp),
      Mary Dalrymple (Xerox PARC),
      Dan Hardt (Villanova University),
      Graeme Hirst (University of Toronto),
      Jerry Hobbs (SRI International),
      Aravind Joshi (University of Pennsylvania),
      Lauri Karttunen (Xerox Research Center Europe),
      Andrew Kehler (SRI International),
      Christopher Kennedy (Northwestern University),
      Massimo Poesio (University of Edinburgh),
      Monique Rolbert (University of Marseille),
      Stuart Shieber (Harvard University),
      Candy Sidner (Lotus Research),
      Marilyn Walker (AT&T).

    This call for paper is also available at
    http://www.wlv.ac.uk/sles/compling/news/text.html



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