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IEEE ICDM GeLiDD 2012 : IEEE ICDM Workshop on Generating Linguistic Descriptions of Data | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://elvex.ugr.es/icdm2012/ | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
Call for Papers
1st Workshop on Generating Linguistic Descriptions of Data (GeLiDD) http://elvex.ugr.es/icdm2012/ in conjunction with IEEE ICDM 2012, Brussels, Belgium, Dec. 10-13, 2012 http://icdm2012.ua.ac.be/ Linguistic Description of Data (LDD) is the description of relevant aspects of a dataset for a human user given in textual form. This is especially important due to the growing amount of data stored and accessible not only to companies and organizations for management purposes, but to common people that is interested in having concise and understandable information and advices on the basis of the evolution of their data. The latter include not only data from their professional activity, but personal data like energy bills, clinical tests, etc., as well as freely-available data about topics of general interest like weather, contamination, traffic, or the price of any kind of products. LDD has an enormous potential for helping both organizations and common people in automatically obtaining periodical, understandable reports and updates of data of their interest, as well as on-demand summaries, without becoming an expert in knowledge representation and uncertainty measures. LDD is related to research areas like Natural Language Generation (NLG), Knowledge Discovery in Databases (KDD), Flexible Query Answering Systems for Data (FQAS), and Human-Machine Interaction (HMI). NLG, the task of generating NL from a machine representation, has provided the current state-of-the-art, technologies in LDD. Like KDD, LDD is intended to provide novel, interesting, previously unknown, and potentially useful knowledge, particularly in the form of a collection of natural language sentences. In addition to the usual data mining tasks, LDD requires the development of models for representing the semantics of language expressions, and how they will be used. LDD is also related to FQAS because of the inherent imprecision, vagueness, and uncertainty in linguistic terms and sentences, as well as the necessity to assess validity and relevance. Finally, LDD intends to improve human-machine interaction, performing automatic natural language generation with adaptation to specific users and contexts. All the aforementioned are key topics of research within this area. The objective of this workshop is to provide a forum for the exposition and discussion of the most recent developments in LDD. Topics of interest include, but are not restricted to • Association rules extraction for LDD • Rule learning for content determination • Concept extraction from data • Pattern extraction and discourse models for discourse planning • Syntactic realization of knowledge extracted from data • Clustering of data and messages for LDD • Architecture of LDD generators • Modeling the semantics of linguistic terms employed in LDD and lexical choice • Learning Ontologies from Data • Content selection and determination for LDD • Linguistic human-machine interaction for data access and description • Computing with Words for LDD • Uncertainties in language • Models for assessing relevance of linguistic expressions. • LDD Applications: description of time series data, visual information, databases, etc. Submission Submission instructions can be found at http://icdm2012.ua.ac.be/content/submission-guidelines Submission of papers is via the on-line submission system at http://wi-lab.com/cyberchair/2012/icdm12/scripts/ws_submit.php choosing Workshop 7: Generating Linguistic Descriptions of Data. Important dates Paper submission August 10th, 2012 Notification of acceptance October 1st, 2012 Camera-ready copies and copyright forms October 15th, 2012 Workshop December 10th, 2012 Contact Nicolás Marín nicm@decsai.ugr.es Daniel Sánchez daniel.sanchezf@softcomputing.es Gracián Triviño gracian.trivino@softcomputing.es Organizing Committee (in alphabetical order) • Nicolás Marín. University of Granada (Spain) • Daniel Sánchez. University of Granada & European Centre for Soft Computing (Spain) • Gracián Triviño. European Centre for Soft Computing (Spain) Program Committee • Alberto Álvarez, European Centre for Soft Computing (Spain) • Bernadette Bouchon-Meunier, University Paris LIP6 (France) • Alberto Bugarín, University of Santiago de Compostela (Spain) • Christer Carlsson, Abo Akademi University (Finland) • Rita Castillo-Ortega, University of Granada (Spain) • Juan Carlos Cubero, University of Granada (Spain) • Robert Dale, Macquarie University (Australia) • Kees van Deemter, University of Aberdeen (UK) • Félix Díaz-Hermida, University of Santiago de Compostela (Spain) • Luka Eciolaza, European Centre for Soft Computing (Spain) • Albert Gatt, University of Malta (Malta) • Helmut Horacek, Universität des Saarlandes (Germany) • Eyke Hüllermeier, University of Marburg (Germany) • Janusz Kacprzyk, Polish Academy of Sciences (Poland) • James M. Keller, University of MIssouri-Columbia (USA) • Emiel Krahmer, Tilburg University (Netherlands) • Jonathan Lawry, University of Bristol (UK) • Carmen Martínez-Cruz, University of Jaén (Spain) • Juan Moreno, University of Castilla-La Mancha (Spain) • François Portet, University of Grenoble (France) • Ehud Reiter, University of Aberdeen (UK) • María-Dolores Ruiz, University of Granada (Spain) • Rudolf Seising, European Centre for Soft Computing (Spain) • Yaji Sripada, University of Aberdeen (UK) • Andrea G. B. Tettamanzi, Universitá degli Studi di Milano (Italy) • Guy de Tré, Ghent University (Belgium) |
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