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    WILS 2012 - The Workshop on Induction of Linguistic Structure (WILS)

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    Category WILS 2012

    Deadline: April 13, 2012 | Date: June 07, 2012

    Venue/Country: Quebec, Canada

    Updated: 2012-02-16 11:56:47 (GMT+9)

    Call For Papers - CFP

    The Workshop on Induction of Linguistic Structure (WILS)

    Co-located with NAACL-HLT 2012 Montreal, Quebec, Canada; June 07, 2012

    http://wiki.cs.ox.ac.uk/InducingLinguisticStructure

    Submission Deadline: March 26, 2012

    Workshop description:

    This workshop addresses the challenges of learning in an unsupervised

    or minimally supervised context with questions of linguistic

    structure. Inducing structured linguistic representations from text

    has long been a fundamental problem in Computational Linguistics and

    Natural Language Processing, drawing from theoretical Computer Science

    and Machine Learning. The popularity of the area is driven by two

    different motivations. Firstly, it can help us to better understand

    the cognitive process of language acquisition in humans. Secondly, it

    can help with portability of NLP applications into new domains and new

    languages. Most NLP algorithms rely on syntactic parse structure

    created by supervised methods, however in many cases there is no

    available training data, thus limiting the portability of these

    algorithms. Consequently work on unsupervised induction of the

    linguistic structure of language holds considerable promise, although

    current approaches are a long way from solving the general problems.

    This workshop aims to foster continuing research in structure

    induction, and bring together different communities working on these

    problems, be it from a cognitive or a text processing perspective.

    In this workshop, we solicit papers from many subfields of

    computational linguistics and language processing. Topics include, but

    are not limited to

    - grammar learning

    - part-of-speech and shallow syntax

    - learning semantic representations

    - inducing document and discourse structure

    - learning/projecting structures across multilingual corpora

    - relation induction across document collections

    - evaluation of induced representations

    Our aim is to bring together work on fully unsupervised methods along

    with minimally supervised approaches (e.g., domain adaptation and

    multilingual projection).

    The workshop will solicit short papers (6 pages) for either oral or

    poster presentation. More details on paper submission will be provided

    in due course on the workshop website.

    The workshop will host the PASCAL Unsupervised grammar induction

    challenge, which aims to foster continuing research in grammar

    induction and part-of-speech induction, while also opening up the

    problem to more ambitious settings, including a wider variety of

    languages, removing the reliance on gold standard parts-of-speech and,

    critically, providing a thorough evaluation including a task-based

    evaluation.

    The shared task will evaluate dependency grammar induction algorithms,

    evaluating the quality of structures induced from natural language

    text. In contrast with the defacto standard experimental setup, which

    starts with gold standard part-of-speech tags, we will encourage

    competitors to submit systems which are completely unsupervised. The

    evaluation will consider the standard dependency tree based measures

    as well as measures over the predicted parts of speech. Our aim is to

    allow a wide range of different approaches, and for this reason we

    will accept submissions which predict just the dependency trees for

    gold PoS, just the PoS, or both jointly.

    While our focus is on unsupervised approaches, we recognise that there

    has been considerable related research using semi-supervised learning,

    domain adaption, cross-lingual projection and other partially

    supervised methods for building syntactic models. For this reason we

    will also support these kinds of systems.

    Important dates:

    Submission Deadline: April 6

    Notification of Acceptance: April 23

    Camera-ready papers Due: May 04

    Workshop: June 07, 2012

    Shared task dates

    Data made available: Jan 27

    Submissions due for evaluation: April 13

    Evaluation results released: April 23

    Team reports due: May 4

    Organizers:

    Trevor Cohn, University of Sheffield

    Phil Blunsom, University of Oxford

    João Graça, Spoken Language Systems Lab, INESC-ID Lisboa

    Program committee:

    Ben Taskar - University of Pennsylvania

    Percy Liang - Stanford University

    Andreas Vlachos - University of Cambridge

    Chris Dyer - CMU

    Mark Drezde - John Hopkins

    Shai Cohen - Columbia University

    Kuzman Ganchev - Google Inc.

    André Martins - CMU/IST Portugal

    Greg Druck - Yahoo

    Ryan McDonald - Google Inc.

    Nathan Schneider - CMU

    Partha Talukdar - CMU

    Dipanjan Das - CMU

    Mark Steedman - University of Edinburgh

    Luke Zettlemoyer - University of Washington

    Roi Reichart - MIT

    David Smith - University of Massachusetts

    Ivan Titov - Saarland University

    Alex Clarke - Royal Holloway University

    Khalil Sima'an - University of Amsterdam

    Stella Frank - University of Edinburgh


    Keywords: Accepted papers list. Acceptance Rate. EI Compendex. Engineering Index. ISTP index. ISI index. Impact Factor.
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