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ALP Workshop 2023 : 1st Workshop on Ancient Language Processing at RANLP 2023 | |||||||||||||||
Link: https://www.ancientnlp.com/alp2023/ | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
1st ALP Workshop will be co-located with RANLP 2023 at Varna, Bulgaria
Ancient languages contain rich human historical and cultural wealth. So far there has been some good advancement in applying language technologies to ancient languages such as Sumerian, Akkadian, Latin, Ancient Greek and Ancient Chinese, especially in the construction of digital language resources and resources to facilitate automatic analysis. The workshop on Ancient Language Processing aims to focus specifically on ancient languages and scripts from the emergence of writing in Mesopotamia and Egypt c. 3000 BCE to the entire world up till 800 AD. We wish to provide a recognized forum to further advance this subfield of NLP, where researchers and practitioners can meet and discuss their latest work, and exchange ideas in addressing shared epigraphical challenges in language processing across various ancient languages, such as non-Latin and non-alphabetic scripts, Right-to-Left, transliteration conventions and fragmentary texts. In addition, we propose shared tasks on Machine Translation for Ancient Chinese and Akkadian, respectively, to provide an opportunity to address the unique challenges faced by ancient language machine translation. Languages of interest include, but are not limited to: Mesopotamia: Sumerian, Akkadian Iran: Elamite, old and middle Persian Levant: Eblaite, Amorite, Aramaic (incl. Mandaic and Syriac), Ancient Hebrew, Phynician, Ugaritic Anatolia: Hittite, Luwian and minor Anatolian languages Egypt: Ancient Egyptian, Coptic Mediterranean: Linear A and B, Ancient Greek, Latin Arabia: Ancient North Arabian, old Arabic India: Sanskrit, Eastern Panjabi, Pali China: Literary Chinese, Tibetan Mesoamerica: Mayan Japan: Old Japanese Papers and contributions are encouraged for any work related to Natural Language Processing of Ancient Languages. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to: Charset (Unicode) Input method (transliteration and transcription) Tokenization (word segmentation) Morphological analysis (both inflectional and derivational) Philological issues in NLP Linguistic Linked Data supporting NLP Syntactic analysis Semantic analysis Machine translation Pre-trained models Deep learning based NLP Multi-lingual comparison for NLP purposes Data mining Knowledge extraction Language varieties and dialects NLP issues in the analysis of broken texts and uncertain readings Minimal computing in NLP We welcome two types of submissions: Long Papers that describe original and unpublished work in any topic area of the workshop. Long papers are limited to 8 pages for content, with 2 additional pages for references. Short Papers that describe either work in progress or a research proposal. They may also be in the style of a position paper that surveys and criticizes existing literature. Short papers must include clear directions for future research. Submissions of this type are limited to 4 pages for content, with 2 additional pages for references. Please also note the following: The papers accepted will be included in the ACL Anthology. Paper submissions must use the official ACL style templates, which are available from here (Latex and Word): https://github.com/acl-org/acl-style-files. Please submit your papers in PDF format. The review will be double-blind. Please do not include any self-identifying information in the submission. This includes anonymizing the already-published work by removing acknowledgments, self-citations, etc. Important dates Paper submission due: July 10, 2023 Notification of acceptance: August 5, 2023 Camera-ready paper due: August 25, 2023 Workshop date: September 7, 2023 All deadlines are 11:59PM UTC-12:00 (“anywhere on Earth”). Submission Submission can be made through this: https://softconf.com/ranlp23/ALP/ Contact: Direct your workshop related inquiries to: ancientnlp@gmail.com Direct your general (including registration related) inquiries to: 2023@ranlp.org Organizing Committee Dr. Adam Anderson, UC Berkeley, USA Dr. Shai Gordin, Ariel University, Israel Dr. Bin Li, Nanjing Normal University, China Dr. Yudong Liu, Western Washington University, USA Dr. Marco C. Passarotti, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Italy Program Committee Tero Alstola, University of Helsinki, Finland Masayuki Asahara, National Institute for Japanese Language and Linguistics, Japan Jonathan Berant, Tel Aviv University, Israel Monica Berti, Leipzig University, Germany Patrick Burns, New York University, USA Christian Chiarchos, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany Gregory Crane, Tufts University, USA Sanhong Deng,Nanjing University, China Minxuan Feng, Nanjing Normal University, China Ethan Fetaya, Bar-Ilan University, Israel Toon Van Hal, University of Leuven, Belgium Renfen Hu, Beijing Normal University, China Heidi Jauhiainen, University of Helsinki, Finland Kyle P. Johnson, Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences, Germany Orly Lewis, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel Johann-Mattis List, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Germany Chao-Lin Liu, National Chengchi University, Taiwan Congjun Long, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China Francesco Mambrini, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Milan, Italy Hubert Mara, MLU Halle, Germany Martijn Naaijer, University of Copenhagen, Denmark Christian M. Prager, University of Bonn, Germany Avital Romach, Yale, USA Luis Sáenz, Ariel University/Heidelberg University, Israel/Germany Si Shen, Nanjing University of Science and Technology, China Xiaodong Shi, Xiamen University, China Qi Su, Peking University, China Thea Sommerschield, Ca’ Foscari University of Venice, Italy Rachele Sprugnoli, Università degli Studi di Parma, Italy Gabriel Stanovsky, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel Niek Veldhuis, University of California, Berkeley, USA Dongbo Wang, Nanjing Agricultural University, China |
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