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FSMNLP 2012 : Finite-State Methods and Natural Language ProcessingConference Series : Finite-State Methods and Natural Language Processing | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://ixa2.si.ehu.es/fsmnlp2012/ | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
"3RD AND LAST CALL FOR PAPERS"
Finite-State Methods and Natural Language Processing - FSMNLP 2012 Tenth International Workshop University of the Basque Country, Donostia - San Sebastián July 23-25, 2012 http://ixa2.si.ehu.es/fsmnlp2012/ INTRODUCTION The International Workshop Series of Finite-State Methods and Natural Language Processing (FSMNLP) is the premier forum of the ACL Special Interest Group on Finite-State Methods (SIGFSM). It serves researchers and practitioners working on * natural language processing (NLP) applications or language resources * theoretical and implementation aspects, or * their combinations that have obvious relevance or an explicitly discussed relation to Finite-State Methods in NLP. This year, the Finite-State Methods and Natural Language Processing (FSMNLP) workshop is part of the Alan Turing Year on the occasion of the Centenary Celebration of his life and work. TOPICS FSMNLP invites papers related to themes including but not limited to: * NLP applications and linguistic aspects of finite-state methods * Finite-state models of language * Practices for building morphological models for the world's languages using finite-state technology * Machine learning of finite-state models of natural language * Finite-state manipulation software and tools with relevance to NLP ========================================= CALL FOR PARTICIPATION Finite-State Methods and Natural Language Processing - FSMNLP 2012 Tenth International Workshop University of the Basque Country (Miramar Palace), Donostia - San Sebastián July 23-25, 2012 http://ixa2.si.ehu.es/fsmnlp2012/ Early registration, June 20: http://ixa2.si.ehu.es/fsmnlp2012/index.php/en/registration ======================================= PROGRAM July 23 15.00-18.00: TUTORIALS Spelling and grammar correction with FSTs (Tommi Pirinen/University of Helsinki, Iñaki Alegria/University of the Basque Country, Mans Hulden/Ikerbasque (Basque Science Foundation)) Coffee Break Probabilistic parsing with weighted FSTs (Miikka Silfverberg/University of Helsinki) Grapheme-to-phoneme training and conversion with WFSTs (Josef Novak/The University of Tokyo) July 24 9.00: Opening 9.30-10.30: Invited Speaker Kimmo Koskenniemi 10.30-11.00: Coffee Break 11.00-12.00: Long Papers I Effect of Language and Error Models on Efficiency of Finite-State Spell-Checking and Correction (Tommi Pirinen and Sam Hardwick) Practical Finite State Optimality Theory (Dale Gerdemann and Mans Hulden) 12.00-13.00: Short Papers I Handling Unknown Words in Arabic FST Morphology (Khaled Shaalan and Mohammed Attia) Urdu – Roman Transliteration via Finite State Transducers (Tina Bögel) Integrating Aspectually Relevant Properties of Verbs into a Morphological Analyzer for English (Katina Bontcheva) Finite-State Technology In A Verse-Making Tool (Manex Agirrezabal, Iñaki Alegria, Bertol Arrieta and Mans Hulden) 13.00-14.30: Lunch 14.30-15.30: Short Papers II DAGGER: A Toolkit for Automata on Directed Acyclic Graphs (Daniel Quernheim and Kevin Knight) WFST-Based Grapheme-To-Phoneme Conversion: Open Source Tools for Alignment, Model-Building and Decoding (Josef Novak, Nobuaki Minematsu and Keikichi Hirose) Kleene, A Free and Open-Source Language for Finite-State Programming (Kenneth R Beesley) Implementation of Replace Rules using Preference Operator (Senka Drobac, Miikka Silfverberg and Anssi Yli-Jyrä) 15.30-16.30: Short Papers III First Approaches On Spanish Medical Record Classification Using Diagnostic Term To Class Transduction (Alicia Pérez, Maite Oronoz, Arantza Casillas, Arantza Díaz de Ilarraza and Koldo Gojenola) Developing an Open-Source FST Grammar for Verb Chain Transfer in a Spanish-Basque MT System (Aingeru Mayor, Mans Hulden and Gorka Labaka) Conversion of Procedural Morphologies To Finite-State Morphologies: A Case Study Of Arabic (Mans Hulden and Younes Samih) A Methodology for Obtaining Concept Graphs from Word Graphs (Marcos Calvo, Jon Ander Gómez, Lluís-F Hurtado and Emilio Sanchis) 16.30-18.00: Posters and coffee 20.30: Dinner (in the Old Town) July 25 9.30-11.00: Long Papers II A Finite-State Temporal Ontology and Event-Intervals (Tim Fernando) A Finite-State Approach to Phrase-Based Statistical Machine Translation (Jorge González) Finite-State Acoustic and Translation Model Composition in Statistical Speech Translation: Empirical Assessment (Alicia Pérez, M. Inés Torres and Francisco Casacuberta) 11.00-11.30: Coffee Break 11.30-12.30: Long Papers III Refining the Design of a Contracting Finite-State Dependency Parser (Anssi Yli-Jyrä, Jussi Piitulainen and Atro Voutilainen) Lattice-Based Minimum Error Rate Training using Weighted Finite-State Transducers with Tropical Polynomial Weights (Aurelien Waite, Graeme Blackwood and William Byrne) 12.30-13.30: Business Meeting ==== SPECIAL THEME: FINITE-STATE NLP IN PRACTICE ==== FSMNLP 2012 will have a special focus on the following topics: * Practical implementations of linguistic descriptions with finite-state technology, including grammars, machine learning tools, language-specific challenges to finite-state NLP * Software tools and utilities for finite-state NLP * Finite-state models of linguistic theories * Applications of finite-state-based NLP in closely related fields such as comparative linguistics, text processing, field linguistics, applied linguistics, language teaching, and computer-aided translation. The special theme does not restrict the scope of papers; rather, the purpose is to attract, apart from other topics, a variety of submissions relating to any practical dimension of finite-state NLP. Especially welcome are succinct short paper (see format below) submissions focused on some specific practical aspect or solution of finite-state NLP. This could be related to e.g. a grammar, a linguistic phenomenon, a linguistic modeling problem, a machine learning problem, or a software tool that implements or uses finite-state technology. We hope that the theme provides us with the possibility of organizing suitable poster, short presentation, and demo sessions related to particular practical problems. For example, today, a large number of languages have morphological/phonological models based on finite-state technology. While most such implementations follow standard design patterns, many grammars also contain elegant non-trivial solutions to some language-specific modeling problem (vowel harmony, reduplication, long-distance agreement, opaque phonological alternations, free variation, morphosyntactic restrictions, etc.). For this year's FSMNLP, we encourage submissions of short papers that focus on documenting such solutions, at the same time providing context by summarizing the development and implementation of the overall grammar. PREVIOUS EDITIONS Nine FSMNLP workshops have been organized in the past in: Blois (2011), Pretoria (2009), Ispra (2008), Potsdam (2007), Helsinki (2005), Budapest (2003), Helsinki (2001), Ankara (1998), Budapest (1996). RELATED EVENTS FSMNLP 2012 will be organized shortly before CIAA. The 17th International Conference on Implementation and Application of Automata (CIAA) will take place in Porto, Portugal on July 17-20, 2012 (800 km from Donostia-San Sebastián). These consecutive periods as well as the European locations facilitate the attendance at both conferences. IMPORTANT DATES Submission Deadline: May 9, 2012 Notification: May 31, 2012 Camera-ready Version: June 18, 2012 Workshop Dates: July 23: tutorials& mini-workshops. July 24-25: main session, poster and demo sessions. SUBMISSIONS Papers should present original, unpublished research and implementation results. Simultaneous submission to other venues with published proceedings is prohibited. FSMNLP accepts two kinds of submissions: * full papers (8 pages + references) reporting completed, significant research, * short papers (4 pages + references) reporting ongoing work and partial results, implementations, grammars, practical tools, interactive software demos, etc. Short papers are expected to be presented as system demos in a demo session, posters and/or short presentations, while long papers are presented in a longer presentation session. Both paper types are published in the ACL anthology. All submissions are electronic and in PDF format via a web-based submission server. Authors are strongly encouraged to use ACL (2012) style (available for LaTeX and Word) in producing the PDF document. These templates are available at: http://acl2012.org/call/sub01.asp Information about the author(s) and other identifying information such as obvious self-references (e.g., "We showed in [12] ...") and financial or personal acknowledgements should be omitted in the submitted papers whenever feasible. Papers will be submitted electronically in PDF using the EasyChair system. The paper can contain a clearly marked appendix and data files to support your claims. This material will not be published. While reviewers are urged to consult this extra material for better comprehension, it is at their discretion whether they do so. Such extra material should also be anonymized to the extent feasible. Use the following link for submission: http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=fsmnlp2012 The papers and abstracts will be published in FSMNLP 2012 proceedings and archived in the ACL Anthology. The publication of selected, revised versions of accepted papers in a special journal issue is planned. INVITED SPEAKERS Kimmo Koskenniemi (University of Helsinki) TUTORIALS We have planned a series of short tutorials (30-60 min. each) addressing some specific application or topic in a concise manner. So far, the following tutorials are planned: * Spelling and grammar correction with FSTs (Iñaki Alegria, Mans Hulden) * Probabilistic parsing with weighted FSTs (Miikka Silfverberg, University of Helsinki) * Machine learning of automata and transducers PROGRAM COMMITTEE Iñaki Alegria (University of the Basque Country) Kenneth R. Beesley (SAP Business Objects, USA) Francisco Casacuberta (Instituto Tecnológico de Informática, Spain) Jan Daciuk (Gdansk University of Technology, Poland) Frank Drewes (Umea University, Sweden) Dale Gerdemann (University of Tübingen, Germany) Mike Hammond (University of Arizona, USA) Thomas Hanneforth (University of Potsdam, Germany) Colin de la Higuera (University of Nantes, France) Jan Holub (Czech Technical University in Prague, Czech Republic) Mans Hulden (Ikerbasque, Basque Country) André Kempe (CADEGE Technologies& Consulting, France) Andras Kornai (Eötvös Loránd University, Hungary) Andreas Maletti (University of Stuttgart, Germany) Mark-Jan Nederhof (University of St Andrews, Scotland) Kemal Oflazer (Carnegie Mellon University, Qatar) Maite Oronoz (University of the Basque Country) Laurette Pretorius (University of South Africa, South Africa) Strahil Ristov (Ruder Boskovic Institute, Croatia) Frederique Segond Frederique (ObjectDirect, France) Max Silberztein (Université de Franche-Comté, France) Richard Sproat (Oregon Health and Science University, USA) Trond Trosterud (University of Tromso, Norway) Shuly Wintner (University of Haifa, Israel) Anssi Yli-Jyra (University of Helsinki, Finland) Menno van Zaanen (Tilburg University, Netherlands) Lynette van Zijl (Stellenbosch University, South Africa) ORGANIZING COMMITTEE Iñaki Alegria (University of the Basque Country) Koldo Gojenola (University of the Basque Country) Izaskun Etxeberria (University of the Basque Country) Nerea Ezeiza (University of the Basque Country) Mans Hulden (Ikerbasque) Amaia Lorenzo (University of the Basque Country) Esther Miranda (University of the Basque Country) Maite Oronoz (University of the Basque Country) Further information about the conference is available at the FSMNLP Conference website: http://ixa2.si.ehu.es/fsmnlp2012/ E-mail: ixa@ehu.es |
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