Posted inCall for Papers / Linguïstiek in België

Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing (EMNLP)

Main conference

SIGDAT, the Association for Computational Linguistics’ Special Interest Group on linguistic data and corpus-based approaches to NLP, invites you to submit your papers to EMNLP 2018 (November 2 – November 4, 2018) in Brussels, Belgium.

We invite the submission of long and short papers related to empirical methods in natural language processing. Accepted papers will be presented as oral talks or posters. As in recent years, the conference will also include presentations of selected papers accepted by the Transactions of the ACL.

Topics

We solicit papers on all areas of interest to the SIGDAT community and aligned fields, including but not limited to:

Language Models, Segmentation
Morphological Analysis, POS Tagging and Sequence Labeling
Syntactic and Semantic Parsing
Lexical and Compositional Semantics
Discourse and Coreference
Dialogue and Interactive Systems
Narrative Understanding and Commonsense Reasoning
Spoken Language Processing
Text Mining
Sentiment Analysis and Opinion Mining
Information Retrieval, Question Answering
Information Extraction
Summarization
Natural Language Generation
Machine Translation
Multilinguality and Cross-linguality
Linguistic Theories and Resources
Computational Psycholinguistics
Multimodal and Grounded Language Processing
Machine Learning for NLP
Web, Social Media and Computational Social Science
Ethics and Fairness in NLP
Other NLP Applications

Important Dates

Submissions due (long & short) Tuesday May 22, 2018
Author response period starts Friday July 6, 2018
Author rebuttals due Thursday July 12, 2018
Notification of acceptance Monday August 6, 2018
Camera-ready due Monday August 27, 2018
Workshops & tutorials Wednesday – Thursday October 31 – November 1, 2018
Main conference Friday – Sunday November 2 – November 4, 2018
Note: All deadlines are calculated at 11:59pm Pacific Daylight Savings Time (UTC -7h).

Conference website : http://emnlp2018.org/

Workshops & Co-located Events

Dates and locations for each workshop will be added soon. Please refer to each individual event’s website for more details.

CoNLL: The Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning

CoNLL is a top-tier conference, yearly organized by SIGNLL (ACL’s Special Interest Group on Natural Language Learning).

WMT18: The Third Conference on Machine Translation

The WMT18 conference builds on a series of annual workshops and conferences on statistical machine translation, going back to 2006.

LOUHI: The Ninth International Workshop on Health Text Mining and Information Analysis

LOUHI 2018 provides an interdisciplinary forum for researchers interested in automated processing of health documents.

BioASQ: Large-scale biomedical semantic indexing and question answering

The aim of the BioASQ workshop is to push the research frontier towards systems that use the diverse and voluminous information available online to respond directly to the information needs of biomedical scientists.

Analyzing and Interpreting Neural Networks for NLP

The goal of this workshop is to bring together people who are attempting to peek inside the neural network black box, taking inspiration from machine learning, psychology, linguistics and neuroscience.

FEVER: First Workshop on Fact Extraction and VERification

The FEVER workshop brings together researchers working on various tasks related to fact extraction and verification and also hosts the FEVER Challenge, an information verification shared task.

ARGMINING: 5th International Workshop on Argument Mining

The goal of the ArgMining workshop is to provide a continuing forum to the last four years’ Argumentation Mining workshops at ACL and NAACL, the first research forum devoted to argumentation mining in all domains of discourse.

ALW2: Second Workshop on Abusive Language Online

The last few years have seen a surge in abusive online behavior, with governments, social media platforms, and individuals struggling to cope with the consequences and to produce effective methods to combat it. The ALW2 workshop bring researchers of various disciplines together to discuss approaches to abusive language.

W-NUT: 4th Workshop on Noisy User-generated Text

The WNUT workshop focuses on Natural Language Processing applied to noisy user-generated text, such as that found in social media, online reviews, crowdsourced data, web forums, clinical records and language learner essays.

SCAI: Search-Oriented Conversational AI

The SCAI workshop aims to bring together AI/Deep Learning specialists on one hand and search/IR specialists on the other hand to lay the ground for search-oriented conversational AI and establish future directions and collaborations.

UDW: Second Workshop on Universal Dependencies

The Universal Dependencies Workshop invites papers on all topics relevant to universal dependencies. Priority will be given to papers that adopt a cross-lingual perspective.

SIGMORPHON: Fifteenth Workshop on Computational Research in Phonetics, Phonology, and Morphology

This workshop organized by the ACL Special Interest Group on Computational Morphology and Phonology provides a forum for exchanging news of recent research developments and other matters of interest in computational morphology and phonology.

WASSA: 9th Workshop on Computational Approaches to Subjectivity, Sentiment and Social Media Analysis

The aim of the WASSA workshop is to continue the line of the previous editions, bringing together researchers in Computational Linguistics working on Subjectivity and Sentiment Analysis and researchers working on interdisciplinary aspects of affect computation from text.

SMM4H: 3rd Social Media Mining for Health Applications Workshop & Shared Task

The SMM4H workshop seeks to attract researchers interested in automatic methods for the collection, extraction, representation, analysis, and validation of social media data for health informatics. It serves as a unique forum to discuss novel approaches to text and data mining methods that are applicable to social media data and may prove invaluable for health monitoring and surveillance.