[Corpora-List] Call for papers: IJCAI workshop on Grammatical Inference Applications

From: Menno van Zaanen (menno@ics.mq.edu.au)
Date: Fri Mar 04 2005 - 05:16:58 MET

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                            Second Call for Papers
                             IJCAI 2005 Workshop

                      GRAMMATICAL INFERENCE APPLICATIONS
                       Successes and Future Challenges

                      To be held in Edinburgh, Scotland,
                     prior to IJCAI-05 on July 31, 2005.

                   http://www.ics.mq.edu.au/~menno/IJCAI05/

    Background

    There has been growing interest over the last few years in learning
    grammars from text and other types of sequential, structured, and
    semi-structured data. The family of techniques enabling such learning
    is usually called grammatical inference or grammar induction (GI). It
    makes use of results and techniques from, among others, machine
    learning, formal language theory, computational learning theory, and
    statistics to learn, induce or infer a grammar or an automaton from a
    training sample. There have been many theoretical and experimental
    results in the field as well as a wide range of applications,
    including computational linguistics, text mining, speech recognition,
    computational biology, web intelligence, and robotics.

    Aim of the workshop

    The workshop is intended as a meeting point of researchers working on
    applications of grammatical inference with more speculative ideas.

    Some topics that are of interest are:
    * Robotics: map learning, language learning
    * Computational linguistics: parsing, natural language processing,
      language modelling
    * Information extraction (IE): world wide web IE, wrapper induction,
      DTD learning
    * User modelling: web usage mining, web personalization
    * Semantic modelling: ontology learning
    * Computational biology: biological sequence analysis, motif
      extraction, structure predictions
    * Machine translation: transducer learning, language alignment,
      bi-language modeling
    * Music modeling: musical style classification, automatic composition
    Note that this is *not* an exhaustive list and non-classical
    applications such as animal language modeling, strategy learning, etc.
    are strongly encouraged.

    It should be noted that a tutorial on Grammatical Inference will be
    given at IJCAI, enables those interested in getting an even more
    general picture of the field and the techniques to do so.

    Participants

    The workshop is open to all members of the AI community and we
    especially encourage papers from researchers who are interested in GI
    and are working on applications where these techniques might be used
    and researchers with a GI background that have an interest in
    applications.

    To encourage interaction and a broad exchange of ideas, the workshop
    will be limited to 40 participants and ample time will be allotted for
    general discussion. Attendance is limited to active participants
    only. Workshop attendees need not register for the main IJCAI
    conference, but are encouraged to do so.

    Format

    The workshop will consist of 30 minute presentations and ample time
    will be allocated for discussions. In addition to the regular papers,
    we will accept position papers. Furthermore, there will be a panel
    discussion on future and more speculative work in applications of GI.

    Submission Guidelines

    Submissions should be formatted as for the main IJCAI-05 conference
    submissions. Information on formatting can be found on the following
    url (with some changes outlined below):
       http://ijcai05.csd.abdn.ac.uk/index.php?section=papers#format
    The maximum number of pages for the papers in the workshop will be 10
    (instead of 6 for the main conference). Note however, it will *not*
    be possible to purchase extra pages.

    The submission guidelines for position papers are the same as for the
    regular papers. However, only 2 pages may be used.

    Please submit the LaTeX source of the article (including all
    non-standard style files and bibtex files) as well as the PDF file
    of the article combined in one file. The filename should have the
    last name of the main author in it.

    Submissions should be sent by email by March 19, 2005. The file
    should be sent to:
       Menno van Zaanen <menno@ics.mq.edu.au>
    and the subject of the email should be:
       Grammatical Inference Applications: <author>
    with <author> the name of the main author.

    We encourage you to send a version some time before the deadline, so
    we can test if the LaTeX sources compile correctly. If you have
    problems with the requirements, please let us know as soon as possible
    (on the above email address).

    Important dates

    * Workshop paper submission deadline: March 19, 2005.
    * Workshop paper acceptance notification: April 12, 2005.
    * Workshop paper camera-ready deadline: April 30, 2005.
    * Workshop dates: July 30 or 31, 2005.

    Reviews

    Submitted papers will be reviewed by referees from the Program
    Committee. Accepted papers will be published in the working notes of
    the workshop.

    Organization

    - Colin de la Higuera (Universite de Saint-Etienne, France),
    - Tim Oates (University of Maryland Baltimore County, USA),
    - Georgios Paliouras (NCSR "Demokritos", Greece),
    - Menno van Zaanen (Macquarie University, Australia).



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