[Corpora-List] JHU Summer Workshop on Language Engineering - Call for Proposals

From: Jason Eisner (jason@cs.jhu.edu)
Date: Thu Sep 28 2006 - 13:47:45 MET DST

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    JHU Summer Workshops
    CALL FOR PROPOSALS
    Deadline: ** Wednesday, October 18, 2006 **

    The Center for Language and Speech Processing at Johns Hopkins
    University invites one-page research proposals for a Summer Workshop
    on Language Engineering, to be held in Baltimore, MD, USA, July 9 to
    August 17, 2007.

    You may already know about these six-week summer workshops, which we
    have hosted since 1995. This year, we have identified specific
    research topics on which progress is desired. We are therefore
    soliciting research proposals (suitable for a six-week team
    exploration) in the following research areas:

    * MULTIDOCUMENT, MULTILINGUAL ENTITY DISAMBIGUATION: Content
    extraction is an extremely important area of research. Entity
    disambiguation - determining whether two entity mentions have the
    same referent - is a very important sub-problem. Disambiguation is
    challenging within one document; it is even more challenging and more
    important across documents, especially in multilingual and/or
    multi-genre collections. The ultimate goal is to have algorithmic
    methods for identifying all of the unique entities in a collection of
    documents of varied types and in several languages, associating each
    entity, including nicknames, name variations, misspellings,
    translations, transliterations, and anaphors, with all of its
    mentions. Solutions to this or a subset of this problem are of
    significant interest.

    * AUTOMATIC ADAPTATION OF SPEECH TECHNOLOGY TO NEW DOMAINS: A
    recurring problem in creating and refining speech technology is the
    time and effort required for data annotation. Another is the need to
    update models as channels, speakers, and vocabularies change over
    time. It would be extremely helpful to have algorithms that could
    automatically adapt themselves as their input data evolves. It would
    also be very helpful to study techniques for making systems trained
    on large amounts (e.g., thousands of hours) of data from a variety of
    domains (different subject matters, styles, speakers, and channels)
    perform nearly as well on unfamiliar domains using only tens of hours
    of annotated data from those domains. Techniques that use large
    amounts of unannotated data from new domains would also be
    appropriate.

    * SOCIAL NETWORKS AND LANGUAGE: Identifying groups and social roles
    of individuals from the frequency and linguistic content of
    communications poses questions at the intersection of social network
    theory, graph theory and natural language processing. Previous work
    on the topology of social networks unveiled surprising
    characteristics of human networks (e.g., Milgram's experiments of the
    60's) and of the connectivity of websites on the Internet. It would
    be helpful to understand how these theories apply to on-line
    communities associated with blogs, chat-rooms, instant messaging,
    etc. Algorithmic solutions that accurately identify groups in these
    communities are particularly desired.

    Research topics selected for investigation by teams in previous
    workshops may serve as good examples for your proposal. (See
    http://www.clsp.jhu.edu/workshops .)

    An independent panel of experts will screen all received proposals
    for suitability. Results of this screening will be communicated
    within a day of receipt of the proposal, and no later than October
    19, 2006. Authors of proposals passing this initial screening will be
    invited to Baltimore to present their ideas to a peer-review panel on
    November 3-5, 2006. It is expected that the proposals will be revised
    at this meeting to address any outstanding concerns or new ideas. Two
    or three research topics and the teams to tackle them will be
    selected for the 2007 workshop.

    We attempt to bring the best researchers to the workshop to
    collaboratively pursue the selected topics for six weeks. Authors of
    successful proposals typically become the team leaders. Each topic
    brings together a diverse team of researchers and students. The
    senior participants come from academia, industry and government.
    Graduate student participants familiar with the field and are
    selected in accordance with their demonstrated performance, usually
    by the senior researchers. Undergraduate participants, selected
    through a national search, are rising seniors who are new to the
    field and have shown outstanding academic promise.

    If you are interested and available to participate in the 2007 Summer
    Workshop we ask that you submit a one-page research proposal for
    consideration, detailing the problem to be addressed and a rough work
    agenda for the workshop. If your proposal passes the initial
    screening, we will invite you to join us for the organizational
    meeting in Baltimore (as our guest) for further discussions aimed at
    consensus. If a topic in your area of interest is chosen as one of
    the two or three to be pursued next summer, we expect you to be
    available for participation in the six-week workshop. We are not
    asking for an ironclad commitment at this juncture, just a good faith
    understanding that if a project in your area of interest is chosen,
    you will actively pursue it.

    Proposals should be submitted via e-mail to clsp@jhu.edu by 5PM ET on
    Wed, October 18, 2006.



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