|    | CALL FOR   ARTICLES  Natural Language Processing and Ethics
   Natural Language Processing (NLP) has always posed ethical or legal problems. These   problems are particularly sensitive in this age of Big Data and of data duplication,   areas in which NLP is involved. In addition to legal and economic matters (search for   patents and rights associated with data/software), there are military issues (monitoring   of conversations) and social issues (the ?right to be forgotten? imposed on Google).
   The crucial problem today is access to data (including sensitive) and personal privacy   protection for citizens. Indeed, our domain produces applications considered to be   effective for both areas (data access and protection), but without their known   limitations being clear to the general public and governments.
   Diversifying work on corpora has also led the community to be able to process more and   more sensitive sources, be it personal data, medical data or even that of a criminal   nature.
   For privacy protection, anonymizing data, whether oral or written, is as much an   industrial as an academic stake, with sometimes strong coverage constraints depending on   the application or research needs, issues regarding the nature of the resources and the   information to be anonymized, or legal limits.
   Some NLP tools also join the ethical concerns, such as tools for plagiarism detection,   facts checking and speaker identification. In addition, the advent of Web 2.0 and with it   the development of crowdsourcing raises new questions as to the way in which to consider   participants in the creation of linguistic resources.
   This special issue of the TAL journal aims to highlight the NLP contributions to ethics   and data protection and to uncover the limitations of the field both in terms of real   possibilities (evaluation) and societal dangers.
   We encourage submissions on all aspects related to ethics for and by Natural Language   Processing, and in particular on the following problems or tasks:
 
   sensitive corpus processing, including medical, police or personal data  language resource production, in particular using crowdsourcing, and ethics  ethical questions linked to the use of tools or the result of NLP processing  ethical questions related to NLP practices  quality and ways of evaluating applications and/or language resources  anonymization, de-identification and re-identification of NLP corpora  plagiarism detection by NLP  facts checking  paralinguistic and ethics, in particular speaker identification or detection of   pathologies  historical perspective of ethics in NLP  definition of ethics as applied to NLP
   We also welcome position papers on the subject.
   LANGUAGE
   Manuscripts may be submitted in English or French. French-speaking authors are requested   to submit in French. Submissions in English are accepted only in case of one of the   authors not being a French speaker.
 
 
   IMPORTANT DATES
 
   ** extension ** end of March 2016 Deadline for submission  end of May 2016 Notification to authors after first review  beg. of July 2016 Deadline for submission of revised version  mid-July 2016 Notification to authors after second review  end of Sept. 2016 Deadline for submission of final version  December 2016 Publication
   PAPER SUBMISSION
   Authors who intend to submit a paper are encouraged to upload their contribution (no more   than 25 pages, PDF format) via the menu 'Paper submission' of the issue page of the   journal. To do so, you will need to have an account on the Sciencesconf platform. To   create an account, go to the Sciencesconf site and click on 'create account' next to the   'Connect' button at the top of the page. To submit, come back to this page, connect to   you account and upload your submission.
   TAL perfoms double blind reviewing. Your paper should be anonymised.
   Style sheets are available for download on the Web site of the journal   (http://www.atala.org/IMG/zip/tal-style.zip).
   Invited editors: Karën Fort (U. Paris-Sorbonne/STIH), Gilles Adda (LIMSI-CNRS/IMMI), K.   Bretonnel Cohen (U. of Colorado, School of Medicine)
   REVIEWING COMMITTEE
   Maxime Amblard (U. de Lorraine/LORIA)  Jean-Yves Antoine (U. de Tours/LI)  Philippe Blache (CNRS / LPL)  Jean-François Bonastre (LIA/U. D'Avignon)  Alain Couillault (U. de La Rochelle/L3i)  Gaël de Chalendar (CEA LIST)  Patrick Drouin (U. de Montréal/OLST)  Cécile Fabre (U. de Toulouse/CLLE-ERSS)  Cyril Grouin (LIMSI-CNRS)  Lynette Hirschman (MITRE Corporation)  Larry Hunter (U. of Colorado, School of Medicine)  Nancy Ide (Vassar College/Dpt of Computer Science)  Juliette Kahn (LNE)  Mark Liberman (UPenn/LDC)  Joseph Mariani (LIMSI-CNRS/IMMI)  Yann Mathet (U. de Caen/GREYC)  Claude Montacié (U. Paris-Sorbonne/STIH)  Jean-Philippe Prost (U. de Montpellier/LIRMM)  Rafal Rzepka (Hokkaido University/Language Media Laboratory)  Björn Schuller (University of Passau)  Michel Simard (National Reseach Council Canada)  Mariarosaria Taddeo (Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford)
   THE JOURNAL
   TAL (Traitement Automatique des Langues) is an international journal that has been   published by ATALA (Association pour le Traitement Automatique des Langues) for the past   40 years with the support of the CNRS. Over the past few years, it has become an online   journal, with possibility of ordering the paper versions. This does not, in any way,   affect the selection and review process.  |