[Corpora-List] Final CFP -- COLING-ACL Workshop on Multiword Expressions:Identifying and Exploiting Underlying Properties

From: Aline Villavicencio (avillavicencio@inf.ufrgs.br)
Date: Wed Mar 29 2006 - 17:20:21 MET DST

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    [Our apologies if you receive multiple copies of this announcement]

                             Final Call for Papers

                COLING-ACL Workshop on Multiword Expressions:
                   Identifying and Exploiting Underlying Properties

                             (Endorsed by SIGLEX)

                       July 23, 2006, Sydney, Australia

                   ** Submission Deadline: April 12 2006 **

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    Workshop Description:

    There has been a growing awareness in the NLP community of the
    problems that Multiword Expressions (MWEs) pose. Given all the
    progress that has been made, it is now the time to ask some
    fundamental questions on the nature of MWEs. A better understanding of
    the underlying linguistic properties that define MWEs as well as their
    cognitive aspects can be used to inform their computational
    treatment. These combinations of research will help to provide a more
    complete picture of the nature of MWEs, which can be used to advance
    NLP methods for capturing them.

    This workshop continues a tradition of ACL workshops on Collocations
    (2001) and Multiword Expressions (2003 and 2004). Its specific
    objective is to focus on the underlying properties of MWEs.

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    Submissions:

    We welcome papers describing original work on MWEs, and this includes
    (but is not limited to) research on:

    (1) Linguistic, Empirical and Cognitive Properties of MWEs: research
        into the definitions and properties of MWEs and the impact that
        such information has on NLP applications. We will also welcome
        studies which investigate cross-linguistic properties or
        which identify variation across languages (or families of
        languages). This includes research on how to identify and
        handle parallel constructions in different languages: how easily
        can techniques developed for one language be transferred to
        another and how can cues in one language help in another?

    (2) Classes of MWEs: investigating the representation of classes of
        MWEs and the extent to which classes of MWEs can be treated with
        common methods, to help assess how much we can expect
        computational techniques to transfer across classes. What methods
        are there for identifying variability in MWEs and how reliable are
        these?

    (3) Linguistic and Psycholinguistic Theories of MWEs: combining the
        computational treatment of a class of MWEs with a solid linguistic
        and/or psycholinguistic analysis.

    (4) Evaluation: addressing how to overcome the limitations that the
        lack of gold standards brings on the evaluation of techniques for
        automatic extraction, representation, and use of information about
        MWEs. What techniques are best for establishing standards - web
        experiments, expert judgements, etc. - and how can we best
        contribute to available resources?

    (5) Compositionality: assessing how humans and computers can make
        reliable judgements on compositionality for the different
        categories of MWE and to what extent non-compositionality is
        important for determining whether a given candidate is a MWE.

    Submissions should follow the two-column format of ACL proceedings and
    should not exceed eight (8) pages, including references. We strongly
    recommend the use of the LaTeX style files or Microsoft Word document
    template that will be made available on the COLING-ACL main conference
    Web site (http://www.acl2006.mq.edu.au/).

    As reviewing will be blind, the paper should not include the authors'
    names and affiliations. Furthermore, self-references that reveal the
    author's identity, e.g., "We previously showed (Smith, 1991) ...",
    should be avoided. Instead, use citations such as "Smith previously
    showed (Smith, 1991) ...".

    Submission will be electronic using the paper submission START system,
    and they must be in Adobe PDF format. The papers must be submitted no
    later than April 12, 2006. Papers submitted after that time will not
    be reviewed. For details of the submission procedure, please consult
    the submission webpage reachable via the workshop website.

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    Important Dates:

    Paper submission deadline: April 12, 2006 Notification of acceptance
    for papers: May 12, 2006 Camera ready papers due: May 26, 2006 Workshop
    Date: July 23, 2006

    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    Programme Committee:

    Timothy Baldwin (Stanford University, USA; Melbourne University,
    Australia)
    Colin Bannard (University of Edinburgh, UK)
    Francis Bond (NTT Communication Science Laboratories, Japan)
    Gosse Bouma (University of Groningen, The Netherlands)
    Beatrice Daille (Nantes University, France)
    Gael Dias (Beira Interior University, Portugal)
    James Dowdall (University of Sussex, UK)
    Christiane Fellbaum (Princeton University, USA)
    Nicole Gregoire (Utrecht University, The Netherlands)
    Matthew Hurst (Inteliseek, USA)
    Nancy Ide (Vassar College, USA)
    Aravind Joshi (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
    Kyo Kageura (National Institute of Informatics, Japan)
    Anna Korhonen (University of Cambridge, UK)
    Brigitte Krenn (OFAI, Vienna, Austria)
    Mirella Lapata (University of Edinburgh, UK)
    Roger Levy (University of Edinburgh, UK)
    Rosamund Moon (University of Birmingham, UK)
    Stephan Oepen (Stanford University, USA; University of Oslo, Norway)
    Kentaro Ogura (NTT Cyber Space Laboratories, Japan)
    Darren Pearce (University of Sussex, UK)
    Scott Piao (University of Lancaster, UK)
    Ivan Sag (University of Stanford, USA)
    Violeta Seretan (University of Geneva, Switzerland)
    Beata Trawinski (University of Tuebingen, Germany)
    Kiyoko Uchiyama (Keio University, Japan)
    Tom Wasow (Stanford University, USA)
    Annie Zaenen (PARC, USA)

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    Contacts:

    For any inquiries regarding the workshop please contact Begona Villada
    Moiron (mwe_iep06 at let.rug.nl).

    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    Workshop organizing committee:

    Begona Villada Moiron [Chair] (University of Groningen, The Netherlands)
    Aline Villavicencio (Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil)
    Diana McCarthy (University of Sussex, UK)
    Stefan Evert (University of Osnabrueck, Germany)
    Suzanne Stevenson (University of Toronto, Canada)

    WEB site: http://www.inf.ufrgs.br/~avillavicencio/mwe-acl06.html



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