[Corpora-List] Second call: NAACL HLT 2007 Doctoral Consortium

From: Jackson Liscombe (jaxin@cs.columbia.edu)
Date: Thu Dec 14 2006 - 17:54:30 MET

  • Next message: Jackson Liscombe: "[Corpora-List] Second call: NAACL HLT 2007 Doctoral Consortium"

    Doctoral Consortium at NAACL HLT 2007
    http://www.cs.rochester.edu/meetings/hlt-naacl07/dc/

    April 22, 2007
    Rochester, NY

    Application Deadline: Jan 18, 2007

    1. Call for Participation

    Following the success of last year, the Doctoral Consortium at
    NAACL HLT 2007 will provide an opportunity for a group of senior
    Ph.D. students to discuss and explore their research and career
    objectives with a panel of established researchers in the fields of
    natural language processing, speech technology, and information
    retrieval. The event is also an opportunity for students to develop
    the skills necessary to effectively communicate one's research in
    preparation for future job talks.

    The Doctoral Consortium will be held as a workshop on April 22, 2007,
    immediately before the start of the main conference. Students will
    present their work and get feedback from a panel of experienced
    researchers. The event will also include a panel presentation on
    professional development topics relevant to students pursuing research
    careers in academia or industry.

    Students will participate in a poster session held during the main
    conference and will have a short paper discussing their research
    published in the companion volume of the proceedings. Each student's
    professional biography, research abstract, and photograph will also be
    included in a face book to be distributed to all attendees of the
    main NAACL HLT 2007 conference.

    The consortium has the following objectives: (1) to provide feedback
    on participants' research and on the presentation of their work to
    others; (2) to develop a supportive community of scholars; (3) to
    support a new generation of researchers with information and advice on
    academic, research, industrial, and non-traditional career paths; and
    (4) to contribute to the NAACL HLT conference goals through
    interaction with other researchers and participation in conference
    events.

    There is a possibility that students who participate in the Doctoral
    Consortium may be able to receive an allowance for basic conference
    registration, travel, and hotel. The Doctoral Consortium organizers
    are currently applying for funding for such travel support. Updates
    will be available on the Doctoral Consortium website:
    http://www.cs.rochester.edu/meetings/hlt-naacl07/dc/

    NAACL HLT 2007 continues the combination of the Human Language
    Technology Conferences (HLT) and North American Chapter of the
    Association for Computational Linguistics (NAACL) Annual Meetings
    begun in 2003. Human language technology incorporates a broad spectrum
    of disciplines working to enable natural language human-computer
    interaction, and providing services such as speech recognition,
    automatic translation, information retrieval, text summarization, and
    information extraction. For further information on the main
    conference, please see
    http://www.cs.rochester.edu/meetings/hlt-naacl07/

    2. Eligibility for Participation

    The event is designed for senior Ph.D. students who are in the last
    few years of their doctoral program (who have already settled on a
    research direction and who have likely already submitted a thesis
    proposal). Students who are conducting research on all aspects of
    human language processing are invited to apply. Topics include (but
    are not limited to):

      + Computational analysis of language
        - Phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics, dialogue,
          discourse, and style

      + Speech processing, including:
        - Speech recognition and speech generation
        - Rich transcription: automatic annotation of information structure
          and sources in speech

      + Information retrieval, text classification, and information
        filtering/recommendation
        - Text data mining, information extraction, text summarization, and
          question answering

      + Multimodal representations and processing

      + Statistical and learning techniques for language, including
        - Corpus-based language modeling
        - Lexical and knowledge acquisition

      + Development of language resources, including
        - Lexicons and ontologies
        - Treebanks, proposition banks, and frame banks

      + Language generation and text planning

      + Multilingual processing, including
        - Machine translation of speech and text
        - Cross-language information retrieval
        - Multi-lingual speech recognition and language identification

      + Intelligent systems for natural language interaction, including
        - Conversational systems for collaboration, tutoring and behavioral
          intervention
        - Embodied conversational agents, virtual humans and human-robot
          conversation
        - Language-enhanced platforms for interactive narrative and digital
          entertainment

      + Evaluation, including
        - Glass-box evaluation of HLT systems and system components
        - Black-box evaluation of HLT systems in application settings

    As part of the application process, students will submit a short paper
    summarizing their research goals, completed work, and future
    directions. This paper should be the basis for the student's
    presentation at the Doctoral Consortium event, which should follow the
    format of an abbreviated job talk. Thus, the paper should give an
    overview of the student's research and highlight his or her
    contributions; the paper may include citations to previous
    publications that describe more specific aspects of the student's
    research.

    The short papers accepted for presentation at the Doctoral Consortium
    cannot be presented or have been presented at any other meeting with
    publicly available proceedings. Papers that are being submitted to
    other conferences must indicate this immediately after the title
    material on the first page.

    Students who are submitting papers on specific portions of their work
    to the main conference are also invited to apply to the Doctoral
    Consortium. In this case, the short paper for the Doctoral Consortium
    must give an overview of the student's dissertation research, and the
    paper for the main conference should focus on a specific piece of this
    work.

    3. Application Procedure

    Applications should contain the following four elements:

    (1) A cover letter (under 2-pages) describing the student's progress
    in his or her degree program, expected date of graduation, plans after
    graduation, and what he or she hopes to gain from the Doctoral
    Consortium. The letter should contain the student's name, department,
    school, contact information, name of advisor, advisor's e-mail
    address, and a short statement affirming that the student meets the
    eligibility requirements specified in Section 2 of this Call for
    Participation.

    (2) The student's Curriculum Vitae (including a list of publications).

    (3) A short paper written by the student summarizing his or her
    research goals, completed work, and future directions. This paper
    should be the basis for the student's presentation at the Doctoral
    Consortium event, and it should give an overview of the student's
    research and highlight his or her major contributions.

    (4) A letter of recommendation from the student's advisor. The
    student's advisor should produce a PDF file of the recommendation
    letter and e-mail it to naacl-hlt-2007-dc@cs.columbia.edu by
    Jan 18, 2007.

    The student should send email to naacl-hlt-2007-dc@cs.columbia.edu by
    Jan 18, 2007, with three attachments in PDF format: the cover letter,
    the Curriculum Vitae, and the short paper.

    The short paper should follow the format of "short papers" submitted
    to the main NAACL HLT 2007 conference. It should follow the
    two-column format of NAACL/ACL proceedings and should not exceed four
    (4) pages, including references. We strongly recommend the use of ACL
    LaTeX or Microsoft Word style files tailored for this year's
    conference. They will be available through the Doctoral Consortium
    homepage (listed below). A description of the format will also be
    available in case you are unable to use the style files directly.
    Papers must conform to the official NAACL HLT 2007 style guidelines,
    and we reserve the right to reject submissions that do not conform to
    these styles including font size restrictions. Submissions should be
    in PDF format and must include all fonts, so that the paper will print
    (not just view) anywhere.

    Further details on the submission procedure and formatting
    instructions may be found at the Doctoral Consortium homepage:
    http://www.cs.rochester.edu/meetings/hlt-naacl07/dc/

    If students are accepted to the Doctoral Consortium, they will also be
    asked to submit a short professional biography, research abstract, and
    photograph to be included in the face book to be distributed to all
    participants at the NAACL HLT 2007 conference. Detailed formatting
    guidelines for the preparation of the final camera-ready copy will be
    provided to authors with their acceptance notice.

    4. Important Dates

    All application materials must be received by 11:59pm (23:59) PST
    (Pacific Standard Time) on Jan 18, 2007. Late submissions will be
    automatically disqualified. Acknowledgment will be e-mailed soon
    after receipt.

    Application deadline: Jan 18, 2007
    Notification of acceptance: Feb 22, 2007
    Camera-ready papers due: Mar 5, 2007
    Doctoral Consortium Event: April 22, 2007
    NAACL HLT 2007 Conference: April 22-27, 2007

    5. Contact Information

    If you need to contact the co-chairs of the Doctoral Consortium,
    please use: naacl-hlt-2007-dc@cs.columbia.edu

    An e-mail sent to this address will be forwarded to the co-chairs.

    Doctoral Consortium Co-chairs:
    Jackson Liscombe (Columbia University)
    Phil Michalak (University of Rochester)

    Faculty Advisor:
    Julia Hirschberg (Columbia University)



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