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CoNLL 2009 : Thirteenth Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://www.cnts.ua.ac.be/conll2009/ | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
CoNLL-2009
Thirteenth Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning Boulder, CO, USA June 4-5 http://www.cnts.ua.ac.be/conll2009/ ====================================================================== CoNLL is the yearly international conference organized by SIGNLL (the ACL Special Interest Group on Natural Language Learning). This year, 2009, CoNLL will be collocated with NAACL HLT in Boulder, CO, USA. We invite submission of papers about natural language learning topics, including, but not limited to: * Computational models of human language acquisition * Computational models of the evolution of language * Machine learning methods applied to natural language processing tasks (speech processing, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, discourse processing, machine translation) * Statistical methods (Bayesian learning, log-linear models, kernel methods, graphical models) * Symbolic learning methods (rule induction and decision tree learning, lazy learning, inductive logic programming, analytical learning, transformation-based error-driven learning) * Biologically-inspired methods (Neural Networks, Evolutionary Computing) * Learning architectures for structural and relational NLP tasks * Reinforcement learning * Active learning, ensemble methods, meta-learning * Computational learning theory analysis of language learning * Empirical and theoretical comparisons of language learning methods * Models of induction and analogy in linguistics See http://ifarm.nl/signll/ and http://ifarm.nl/signll/conll/ for more information about SIGNLL and CoNLL. Special Topic of Interest ------------------------- The field of natural language learning has made great strides over the last 15 years, especially in the design and application of supervised and batch learning methods. However, two challenges arise with this kind of approach. First, in core NLP tasks, supervised approaches require typically large amounts of manually annotated data, and experience has shown that results often depend on the precise make-up and genre of the training text, limiting generalizability of the results and the reach of the annotation effort. Second, in modeling aspects of human language acquisition, the role of supervision in learning must be carefully considered, given that children are not provided explicit indications of linguistic distinctions, and generally do not attend to explicit correction of their errors. Moreover, batch methods, even in an unsupervised setting, cannot model the actual online processes of child learning, which show gradual development of linguistic knowledge and competence. For our special focus this year at CoNLL, we invite papers on unsupervised, minimally supervised and semi-supervised methods in natural language learning, as well as on incremental learning methods. Specifically, we encourage submissions of papers addressing: * Semi-supervised approaches that improve existing supervised methods by leveraging unlabeled data. * Learning methods and novel approaches to automatic annotation that draw on a minimal amount of human supervision. * Novel unsupervised models of human language learning, with special interest in incremental methods that can account for the time-course of acquisition data. * Learning methods for NLP tasks that can adapt over time to new inputs, and that increase robustness of existing approaches. * Connections between techniques from the cognitive modeling domain and NLP tasks that help to alleviate the training data bottleneck. Shared Task ----------- Syntactic and Semantic Dependencies in Multiple Languages The task for CoNLL 2009 is an extension of the CoNLL 2008 shared task to multiple languages (English plus Czech, Chinese, Spanish, Catalan, Japanese, and German). The core task of (jointly) extracting syntactic and semantic dependencies and the main evaluation scheme and methodology remains unchanged, with several new twists proposed to make the task interesting also for those who have already taken part in the English-only task in 2008. Among the new features are compatible evaluation for several languages and their comparison, comparison of time and space complexity based on participants' input, and learning curve comparison for languages with large datasets. The data contents and format will be similar to the CoNLL 2008 shared task whenever possible, depending also on the source treebanks being used. The shared task data will thus have the following features: * The syntactic and semantic dependencies will be represented directly. * The contents of the datasets will allow for joint learning of both syntactic and semantic dependencies and their labeling. * Tools will be provided whenever possible to help with the dependency analysis of the languages involved. * The contents and format of the data will enable the participants to build on the previous CoNLL shared tasks on semantic labeling and dependency parsing. * The format of the non-English datasets will be identical or close to identical to the English data, to encourage participants to run their systems on other languages as well. The task is described in detail in its own Call for Participation at http://ufal.mff.cuni.cz/conll2009-st Shared Task contact email: conll09st@ufal.mff.cuni.cz Shared Task main dates and deadlines: * Release of training and development data sets: January 19th * Task running period (test data available): March 11th - 18th * Submission of system papers: March 30th * Camera-ready deadline: April 15th Best Paper Award ---------------- As in previous CoNLL conferences, a Best Paper Award will be given to the authors of the highest quality paper. The most important aspects in judging the quality of a paper for this award will be: originality, innovativeness, relevance, and impact of the presented research. Invited Speakers ---------------- To be announced. Main Session Submissions ------------------------ A paper submitted to CoNLL-2009 must describe original, unpublished work. Submit a full paper of no more than 8+1 pages in PDF format by March 4 2009, 11:59 GMT, electronically through the web form at http://www.softconf.com/naacl-hlt09/CoNLL2009/submit.html Only electronic submissions will be accepted. Submissions should follow the two-column format of NAACL HLT 2009 proceedings, and be at most eight (8) pages in length. To encourage thorough citation of related work, the references section does not count against the 8 page limit: up to one additional page is allowed for the references section of a submitted paper. We strongly recommend the use of the NAACL HLT 2009 LaTeX style files or Microsoft Word Style files tailored for this year's conference. Papers must conform to the official NAACL HLT 2009 style guidelines. Authors who cannot submit a PDF file electronically should contact the program co-chairs. Since reviewing will be blind, the paper should not include the authors' names and affiliations, and there should be no self-references that reveal the authors' identity. In the submission form, you will be asked for the following information: paper title, authors' names, affiliations, and email addresses, contact author's email address, a list of keywords, abstract, and an indication of whether the paper has been simultaneously submitted to other conferences (and if so which conferences). The contact author of an accepted paper under multiple submissions should inform the program co-chairs immediately whether he or she intends the accepted paper to appear in CoNLL-2009. A paper that appears in CoNLL-2009 must be withdrawn from other conferences. Authors of accepted submissions are to produce a final paper to be published in the proceedings of the conference, which will be available at the conference for participants, and distributed afterwards by ACL. Final papers must follow the NAACL HLT 2009 style and are due April 15, 2009. At least one author is expected to register for the conference and present the paper. Important Dates --------------- * Paper submission deadline: March 4 * Notification of acceptance: April 3 * Camera-ready copy deadline: April 15 * Conference: June 4-5 Shared Task Submissions ----------------------- See the shared task web page for detailed instructions at http://ufal.mff.cuni.cz/conll2009-st Conference Organizers --------------------- Suzanne Stevenson Department of Computer Science University of Toronto suzanne (at) cs.toronto.edu Xavier Carreras Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory Massachusetts Institute of Technology carreras (at) csail.mit.edu Shared Task Organizers ---------------------- Jan Hajic (chair) Institute of Formal and Applied Linguistics Charles University in Prague hajic (at) ufal.mff.cuni.cz Organizers: * Massimiliano Ciaramita, Google Research (Switzerland) * Richard Johansson, Lund University (Sweden) * Daisuke Kawahara, NICT (Japan) * Maria Antonia Marti, University of Barcelona (Spain) * Lluis Marquez, Technical University of Catalonia (Spain) * Adam Meyers, New York University (USA) * Joakim Nivre, Uppsala University (Sweden) * Sebastian Pado, Stanford University (USA) * Pavel Stranak, Charles University, Prague (Czech Republic) * Mihai Surdeanu, Stanford University (USA) * Nianwen (Bert) Xue, University of Colorado, Boulder (USA) * Yi Zhang, Saarland University, Saarbruecken (Germany) Information Officer ------------------- Erik Tjong Kim Sang University of Groningen (The Netherlands) e.f.tjong.kim.sang (at) rug.nl |
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