[Corpora-List] CFP - Summarization and QA Workshop (MSQA 2004) in IJCNLP-04

From: Chin-Yew Lin (cyl@ISI.EDU)
Date: Fri Nov 14 2003 - 20:44:32 MET

  • Next message: Timothy Baldwin: "[Corpora-List] Re: enquiry"

    CALL FOR PAPERS

    WORKSHOP ON MULTILINGUAL SUMMARIZATION AND QUESTION ANSWERING 2004

    Workshop on
    Multilingual Summarization and Question Answering (2004)
    - Towards Systematizing and Automatic Evaluations

    (post-conference workshop in conjunction with IJCNLP-04)

    March 25, 2004
    Hainan Island, China

    WEB SITE: http://www.isi.edu/~cyl/msqa-eval-ijcnlp04

    [INTRODUCTION]
    Automatic summarization and question answering (QA) are now enjoying a period of
    revival and they are advancing at a much quicker pace than before. Recently in
    the United States, TREC started an English QA track in 1999 and DUC sponsored by
    NIST also started a new English summarization evaluation series in 2001. In
    Japan, NTCIR project included Japanese text summarization task in 2000 and QA
    task in 2001.

    One major challenge of these large scale evaluation efforts is how we can
    evaluate summarization and QA systems systematically and automatically. In other
    words, is there a consistent and principled way in estimating the quality of any
    summarization and QA systems accurately and can we automate the evaluation
    process? The release of the "Framework for Machine Translation Evaluation in
    ISLE (FEMTI)" and the recent adoption of the automatic evaluation metrics, BLEU
    and NIST, in the machine translation community are good examples that we might
    be able to find leverage from and extend them to summarization and QA
    evaluations. A good example in automatic evaluation of summaries is the ROUGE
    method developed at the Information Sciences Institute, University of Southern
    California.

    This workshop focuses on automatic summarization and QA, and enable participants
    to discuss the integration of multiple languages and multiple functions and most
    importantly how to robustly estimate quality of summarization and QA. We also
    welcome submissions related to any aspects of summarization and QA with main
    sections dedicated to evaluation.

    [FORMAT FOR SUBMISSIONS]
          Submissions are limited to original, unpublished work. Submissions must
          use the ijc-NLP LaTeX style files or Microsoft Word Style files tailored
          for ijc-NLP. The ijc-NLP style files can be found here. Paper submissions
          should consist of a full paper (5000 words or less, exclusive of title
          page and references). Papers outside the specified length are subject to
          be rejected without review. The paper should be written in English.

    [SUBMISSION QUESTIONS]
          Please send submission questions to Chin-Yew Lin [cyl at isi.edu].

    [SUBMISSION PROCEDURE]
          Electronic submission only: send the pdf (preferred), postscript, or MS
          Word form of your submission to: Chin-Yew Lin [cyl at isi.edu]. The
          Subject line should be "IJCNLP-04 WORKSHOP PAPER SUBMISSION". Because
          reviewing is blind, no author information is included as part of the
          paper. An identification page must be sent in a separate email with the
          subject line: "IJCNLP-04 WORKSHOP ID PAGE" and must include title, all
          authors, theme area (i.e. summarization, QA, or both), keywords, word
          count, and an abstract of no more than 5 lines. Late submissions will not
          be accepted. Notification of receipt will be e-mailed to the first author
          shortly after receipt.

    [DEADLINES (Tentative)]
          Paper submission deadline: Dec 12, 2003
          Notification of acceptance for papers: January 10, 2004
          Camera ready papers due: January 24, 2004
          Workshop date: March 25, 2004

    [PROGRAM CHAIRS]
          Hang Li Microsoft Research, Asia, China
          Chin-Yew Lin USC/ISI, USA

    [PROGRAM COMMITTEE]
          Hsin-Hsi Chen National Taiwan University, Taiwan
          Tat-Seng Chua National University of Singapore, Singapore
          Junichi Fukumoto Ritsumeikan University, Japan
          Takahiro Fukusima Otemon Gakuin University, Japan
          Donna Harman NIST, USA
          Hongyan Jing IBM Research, USA
          Tsuneaki Kato University of Tokyo, Japan
          Gary Geunbae Lee Postech, South Korea
          Bernardo Magnini Istituto Trentino di Cultura (ITC)/IRST, Italy
          Tadashi Nomoto National Institute of Japanese Literature, Japan
          John Prager IBM Research, USA
          Drago Radev University of Michigan, USA
          Karen Sparck-Jones Cambridge University, UK
          Simone Teufel Cambridge University, UK

     



    This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Fri Nov 14 2003 - 20:46:24 MET