(2017-06-12) CfP Phonetics and Phonology in Europe 2017, Cologne, Germany
*First Call for Papers and Workshops: Phonetics and Phonology in Europe 2017*
University of Cologne, 12-14 June 2017
The Phonetics and Phonology in Europe (PaPE) conference is an interdisciplinary forum bringing together researchers interested in all areas of phonetics and phonology, both theoretical and applied, with a special focus on Laboratory Phonology. The series covers a wide variety of topics including tone and intonation, phonological theory, language acquisition, linguistic typology, and methodologies from fields as diverse as psycholinguistics, neurolinguistics and speech technology.
The Cologne PaPE conference, scheduled for June 12-14 2017, complements this broad mission with a more specific scientific aim, namely to contribute towards a fundamental integration of the fields of phonetics and phonology, highlighting the intrinsic relationship between the two. Submissions in any area of phonetics and phonology are welcome with special consideration given to papers addressing the conference's integrative goal.
Confirmed keynote speakers
Jonathan Barnes (Boston University)
Bettina Braun (Universität Konstanz)
Mirjam Ernestus (Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen)
Maria Josep Solé (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)
Satellite workshops will be held on June 11 (whole day) and June 14 (afternoon) 2017.
Important Dates Abstract submission deadline: December 9, 2016 Notification of acceptance: January 21, 2017 Submission of revised abstracts: February 25, 2017 PaPE 2017 Conference: June 12-14, 2017
Submission Information Abstracts should be written in English and not exceed one page of text (A4). In addition, references, examples and/or figures can optionally be included on a second page. Abstracts can be submitted from November 1 until December 9, 2016, using the EasyChair link that will be provided on the conference website. Abstracts may be submitted either for a 'talk/poster', or as a 'poster only'. Authors may submit one abstract as first author and up to three abstracts as a co-author.
Call for Satellite Workshop proposals
University of Cologne, June 11 (whole day) and June 14 (afternoon) 2017
The PaPE 2017 Organizing Committee invites proposals for workshops to be held in conjunction with the conference. There is no restriction regarding topics, as long as there is a clear relevance to phonetics and phonology. Rooms for the workshops will be provided. The workshop proposal should be sent to pape-2017@uni-koeln.de by October 1 and should not exceed two A4 pages and include information on the topic, the organizers (including affiliation and e-mail address) and the paper selection process.
PaPE Organization Martine Grice, Stefan Baumann, Francesco Cangemi, Anna Bruggeman (University of Cologne)
(2017-06-19) 2017 Jelinek Memorial Summer School and Workshop on Speech and Language Technology (JSALT) at CMU.
2017 Jelinek Memorial Summer School and Workshop on Speech and Language Technology (JSALT) at CMU.
The 2017 Annual Jelinek Memorial Workshop on Speech and Language Technology will be held at Carnegie Mellon University's Language Technologies Institute in Pittsburgh, PA. It is a continuation of the Johns Hopkins University CLSP summer workshop series from 1995-2016. Please see https://www.lti.cs.cmu.edu/2017-jelinek-workshop for more information.
Workshop (June 19-August 11, 2017):
This year's topics and research teams will be:
* Neural Machine Translation with Minimal Parallel Resources (Leader: George Foster and Reza Haffari)
* Enhancement and Analysis of Conversational Speech (Leader: Mark Liberman and Ken Church)
* The Speaking Rosetta Stone - Discovering Grounded Linguistic Units for Languages without Orthography (Leader: Emmanuel Dupoux and Odette Scharenborg)
Summer School (June 19-30, 2017):
The summer school is meant to be an introduction to the state-of-the-art research in the speech and language technology area for graduate and undergraduate students. It also contains an introduction to this year's workshop research topics. View the program details and register at https://www.lti.cs.cmu.edu/2017-cmu-summer-school-human-language-technology.
(2017-06-19) CfP CBMI 2017, 15th International Workshop on Content-Based Multimedia Indexing , Firenze, Italy
CBMI 2017, June 19-21, Firenze, Italy 15th International Workshop on Content-Based Multimedia Indexing Last Call for Papers - Extended deadline ------------------------------------------------------------ http://cbmi2017.micc.unifi.it https://twitter.com/cbmi2017
CBMI aims at bringing together the various communities involved in all aspects of content-based multimedia indexing for retrieval, browsing, management, visualization and analytics.
The 15th edition of CBMI will be organized in Firenze, Italy, 19-21 June 2017. The scientific program will include invited keynote talks and regular, special and demo sessions.
Authors are encouraged to submit previously unpublished research papers in the broad field of content-based multimedia indexing and applications. We wish to highlight significant contributions addressing the main problem of search and retrieval but also the related and equally important issues of multimedia content management, user interaction, large-scale search, learning in retrieval, social media indexing and retrieval. Additional special sessions (http://www.micc.unifi.it/cbmi2017/call-for-special-session-papers/) are planned in Deep Learning for Multimedia indexing, Multimedia for Cultural Heritage, Sparse Data Machine Learning for Domains in Multimedia and Synergetic media production architecture.
Topics: Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following: * Audio and visual and multimedia indexing; * Multimodal and cross-modal indexing; * Deep learning for multimedia indexing; * Visual content extraction; * Audio (speech, music, etc) content extraction; * Identification and tracking of semantic regions and events; * Social media analysis; * Metadata generation, coding and transformation; * Multimedia information retrieval (image, audio, video, text); * Mobile media retrieval; * Event-based media processing and retrieval; * Affective/emotional interaction or interfaces for multimedia retrieval; * Multimedia data mining and analytics; * Multimedia recommendation; * Large scale multimedia database management; * Summarization, browsing and organization of multimedia content; * Personalization and content adaptation; * User interaction and relevance feedback; * Multimedia interfaces, presentation and visualization tools; * Evaluation and benchmarking of multimedia retrieval systems; * Applications of multimedia retrieval, e.g., medicine, lifelogs, satellite imagery, video surveillance; * Cultural heritage applications.
Paper submission Authors are invited to submit full-length and special session papers of 6 pages and short (poster) and demo papers of 4 pages maximum. The submissions are peer reviewed in single blind process. The language of the workshop is English. Important dates * Full/short paper submission deadline: extended to March 14, 2017 * Demo paper submission deadline: extended to March 14, 2017 * Special Session paper submission deadline: extended to March 14, 2017 * Notification of acceptance: April 28, 2017 * Camera-ready papers due: May 9, 2017 * MTAP special issue paper submission: October 15, 2017 (tentative) http://www.micc.unifi.it/cbmi2017/mtap-special-issue/
Technical Program Chairs Rita Cucchiara, Univ. of Modena e Reggio Emilia, Italy Tao Mei, Microsoft Research Asia, China
(2017-06-21) International Conference Subsidia: Tools and Resources for Speech Sciences, Málaga (Costa del Sol, Spain).
The Phonetics Laboratory of the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) and the University of Málaga are happy to announce the upcoming celebration of the International Conference Subsidia: Tools and Resources for Speech Sciences, which will take place onJune 21-23, 2017, in the city ofMálaga(Costa del Sol, Spain). During this quarter of 2016 we will be sending further information concerning the Conference, as well as its website address. If you have any questions, please contact Juana Gil: juana.gil@cchs.csic.es, or José Villa:jovillavilla@hotmail.com.
(2017-06-28) Journée de formation AFCP: 'Statistique et données phonétiques atypiques', Paris
Journée de Formation AFCP - 1er appel.
'Statistique et données phonétiques atypiques', le 28 Juin 2017 à Paris (lieu à confirmer).
Dans le cadre de ses 'Journées de Formation', l'Association Francophone pour la Communication Parlée (http://www.afcp-parole.org) organise une première journée de formation à la Statistique en lien avec les Journées de Phonétique Clinique qui auront lieu à Paris les 29 et 30 Juin 2017 (JPC, http://jpc7.ilpga.fr).
L'objectif de cette formation est d'illustrer les approches actuelles de l'analyse de données phonétiques, en particulier pour le traitement de données non-standard (données non-Gaussiennes, petits échantillons, 'single-case' studies, comparaison de points dans le temps, mesures répétées...).
Si les outils qui seront abordés sont particulièrement adaptés aux problématiques rencontrées en phonétique clinique, ils sont applicables à d'autres données de parole. Toutes les personnes intéressées par la mise en oeuvre d?analyses statistiques aux données de parole peuvent donc y trouver un intérêt (voir le programme) et seront les bienvenues.
L'inscription est gratuite mais obligatoire.
Jusqu'au 01/05/2017, les places sont réservées prioritairement aux membres de l'AFCP ainsi qu'aux participants aux 7èmes Journées de Phonétique Clinique. Passée cette date, les inscriptions seront ouvertes à tous dans la limite des places disponibles. Que vous soyiez prioritaire ou pas, n'hésitez pas à vous inscrire dès maintenant et nous vous donnerons une réponse dès le 1er Mai.
11h-13h : Les bases de la Statistique (intervenants à confirmer). Introduction et rappels des problématiques fondamentales en analyse statistique des données.
1- Variables et distributions (Nature des variables -données continues / non-continues / temporelles ; transformation de variables ; Distributions -loi normale, intervalles de confiance, autres distributions) ; 2- La notion d'effet (Relation entre variables -covariation, dépendantes / indépendantes, réponses / prédicteurs-, Nature des effets -fixes, aléatoires) ; 3- Problématiques courantes en Statistique (types d'erreurs statistiques, intervalles de confiance d'une mesure, tests d'hypothèse) ;
14h-18h : Analyse de données atypiques en phonétique (intervenants à confirmer).
Les données seront issues de projets de recherche en phonétique ayant donné lieu à des analyses statistiques réelles et correspondant à des mesures 'atypiques' dans le sens où elles ne correspondent pas nécessairement aux données traditionnelles décrites dans les manuels (données non-Gaussiennes, petits échantillons, 'single-case' studies, comparaison de points dans le temps, mesures répétées...). Sans pouvoir assurer une formation qui aboutirait à la mise en oeuvre pratique de ces méthodes, l'objectif pédagoqique de cette demi-journée sera d'illustrer quelques unes des méthodes disponibles et les choix qui président à leur mise en oeuvre dans le cadre d'une démarche de recherche.
Pour vous inscrire, merci de remplir le formulaire disponible à l'adresse ci-dessous.
Organisées pour la première fois à Paris en 2005 puis rééditées successivement à Grenoble (2007), Aix-en-Provence (2009), Strasbourg (2011) et Liège (2013), Montpellier (2015), les Journées de Phonétique Clinique (JPC) réunissent des chercheurs et des ingénieurs, des médecins, et des orthophonistes s?intéressant tous aux questions liées au fonctionnement normal et pathologique de la voix, de la parole et du langage.
Les 7èmes Journées de Phonétique Clinique se dérouleront à Paris du 29 juin au 30 juin 2017. Elles sont organisées par le Laboratoire de Phonétique et de Phonologie (LPP-UMR7018), avec la collaboration de l?Université Sorbonne Nouvelle, l?Université Paris Descartes, l?Hôpital Européen Georges Pompidou HEGP (service ORL et l?unité d?exploration fonctionnelle des troubles de la voix, de la parole et de la déglutition), le LabEx EFL, le Département d?Orthophonie de l?Université Pierre et Marie Curie.
Deux conférences plénières seront organisées avec la présence des Professeurs Jody Kreiman (UCLA, USA) ?Perception of normal and disordered Voice and Speech? et Hermann Ackermann (Tuebingen, Allemagne) ?Disorders of spoken language in neurological diseases?
L?objectif de ces Journées interdisciplinaires sera de faire progresser les connaissances fondamentales relatives aux troubles phonétiques de la voix et de la parole et les interactions avec d'autres troubles dans le but de mieux comprendre, évaluer, diagnostiquer et remédier aux troubles de la production et de la perception de la voix et de la parole, chez les sujets pathologiques. Dans ce contexte, cette série de colloques internationaux Francophone représente une opportunité pour des professionnels, des chercheurs confirmés et des jeunes chercheurs de formations différentes de présenter des résultats expérimentaux nouveaux et d?échanger des idées de diverses perspectives.
Les propositions de communications porteront ainsi sur les études de la voix et de la parole normale et pathologiques, chez l?adulte et chez l?enfant. Les thèmes des 7èmes Journées de Phonétique Clinique incluront donc, de façon non exhaustive, les problématiques suivantes :
- troubles phonétiques / phonologiques
- troubles de la production / de la perception
- troubles voix / parole
- communication verbale / non verbale
- troubles moteurs de la parole
- Instrumentation et ressources en phonétique clinique
Pour cette 7° édition, une attention toute particulière sera accordée au control moteur de la parole et ses perturbations.
Dates Importantes
15 février 2017 : Date limite de soumission des propositions de communication sous forme de résumé de 500 mots (hors bibliographie)
15 mars 2017 : Notification aux auteurs
15 avril 2017 : Fin des inscriptions au tarif réduit
29-30 juin 2017 : Conférence à l?Auditorium de l?Hôpital Européen Georges Pompidou 20 rue Leblanc, 75015 Paris
Frais d'inscriptions prévisionnels (incluant pauses café, déjeuners des 29 et 30, soirée du 29)
Pour une inscription jusqu'au 15 avril (puis +20 euros sur tous les tarifs)
tarif étudiant membres (AFCP, APB, SFP, UNADREO*)
70 euros
tarif étudiant
90 euros
tarif plein membres (AFCP, APB, SFP, UNADREO*)
170 euros
tarif plein
190 euros
* tarif préférentiel pour les membres des associations partenaires : l?AFCP (Association Francophone de la Communication Parlée), l?APB (Association Parole Bégaiement), la SFP (Société Française de Phoniatrie et des pathologies de la communication), l?UNADREO (Union Nationale pour le Développement de la Recherche et de l?Evaluation en Orthophonie)
eNTERFACE workshops aim at establishing a tradition of collaborative, localized research and development work by gathering, in a single place, a team of senior project leaders in multimodal interfaces, researchers, and (undergraduate) students, to work on a pre-specified list of challenges, for 4 weeks.
Following the success of the previous eNTERFACE workshops held in Mons (Belgium, 2005), Dubrovnik (Croatia, 2006), Istanbul (Turkey, 2007), Paris (France, 2008), Genova (Italy, 2009), Amsterdam (Netherlands, 2010), Plzen (Czech Republic, 2011), Metz (France, 2012), Lisbon (Portugal, 2013), Bilbao (Spain, 2014), Mons (Belgium, 2015), Twente (Netherlands 2016), the Digital Creativity Centre (CCD), Universidade Catolica Portuguesa, has the pleasure to host eNTERFACE?17, the 13th Summer Workshop on Multimodal Interfaces, to be held in Porto, Portugal from July 3rd to 28th, 2017.
The eNTERFACE'17 committee now invites researchers to submit project proposals that will be evaluated by the scientific committee. All the information asked to submit a project is available on the website of the workshop. The proposals should contain a full description of the project's objectives, required hardwares/softwares and relevant literatures.
Participants are organized in teams, attached to specific projects, working on free software. Each week will typically consist of working sessions by the teams on their respective projects plus a tutorial given by an invited senior researcher and a presentation of the results achieved by each project group. The last week will be devoted to writing an article on the results obtained by the teams plus a big session where all the groups will present their achievements.
Proceedings are expected to be published by CITAR Journal. CITAR Journal was recently (July 2016) accepted for inclusion in a new index of the Web of Science (WoS) Core Collection: the Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI), and has also been accepted for indexing by Elsevier's Scopus.
TOPICS
Although not exhaustive, the submitted projects can cover one or several of the topics : Art and Technology, Affective Computing, Assistive and Rehabilitation Technologies, Assistive Technologies for Education and Social Inclusion, Augmented Reality, Conversational Embodied Agents, Human Behavior Analysis, Human Robot Interaction, Interactive Playgrounds, Innovative Musical Interfaces, Interactive Systems for Artistic Applications, Multimodal Interaction, Signal Analysis and Synthesis, Multimodal Spoken Dialog Systems, Search in Multimedia and Multilingual Documents, Smart Spaces and Environments, Social Signal Processing, Tangible and Gesture Interfaces, Teleoperation and Telerobotics, Wearable Technology, Virtual Reality
IMPORTANT DATES
20 January 2017: Notification of interest for a project proposal with a summary of project goals, work-packages and deliverables (1-page) 10 February 2017: Submission deadline: Final project proposal 20 February 2017: Notification of acceptance to project leaders 06 March 2017: Start Call for Participation, participants can apply for projects 21 April 2017: Call for Participation is closed 28 April 2017: Teams are built, notification of acceptance to participants 03 ? 28 July 2017: eNTERFACE?17 Workshop
SUBMISSION PROCEDURE
The general procedure of the eNTERFACE workshop series is as follows. Researchers are invited to submit project proposals. The project proposals will be evaluated by the eNTERFACE steering committee. If accepted, the projects will be published and researchers and students are invited to apply for up to 3 projects they would like to be part of. After notifying the applicants, the project leaders can start building their teams.
Notifications of interest and final project proposals must be submitted by email (PDF) to enterface17@porto.ucp.pt.
Instructions for the 1-page notification of interest: give the title, a short summary of the proposed research and project, and the names and affiliations of the main researchers. Instructions for the final proposal: please go to the website guidelines-for-authors-of-final-project-proposals for detailed instructions on how to submit your final project proposal.
Scientific Committee
Prof. Albert Ali Salah, University of Bogazici, Turkey Prof. Alvaro Barbosa, University of Saint Joseph, Macao, China Prof. Andrew Perkis, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway Prof. Antonio Camurri, University of Genova, Italy Prof. Benoit Macq, Université Catholique de Louvain (UCL), Belgium Prof. Bruce Pennycook, University of Texas at Austin, USA Prof. Christophe d'Alessandro, CNRS-LIMSI, France Dr. Daniel Erro, Cirrus Logic, Spain Prof. Dirk Heylen, University of Twente, Netherlands Prof. Gualtiero Volpe, University of Genova, Italy Prof. Igor S. Pand?i?, University of Zagreb, Croatia Prof. Inma Hernaez, University of the Basque Country, Spain Prof. Jean Vanderdonckt, Université Catholique de Louvain (UCL), Belgium Prof. Jorge C. S. Cardoso, University of Coimbra, Portugal Prof. Khiet Truong, University of Twente, Netherlands Prof. Kostas Karpouzis, National Technical University of Athens, Greece Prof. Ludger Brümmer, ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhey, Germany Prof. Luis Teixeira, Universidade Católica Portuguesa (UCP), Portugal Prof. Martin Kaltenbrunner, Kunstuniversität Linz, Austria Prof. Maureen Thomas, Cambridge University Moving Image Studio, UK Prof. Milos Zelezny, University of West Bohemia, Czech Republic Prof. Nuno Guimarães, Information Sciences, Technologies and Architecture Research Center (ISTAR-UL), Portugal Prof. Olivier Pietquin, University of Lille | Google DeepMind, France Prof. Sandra Pauletto, University of York, UK Prof. Stefania Serafin Professor, Aalborg University Copenhagen, Denmark Prof. Thierry Dutoit, University of Mons, Belgium Prof. Yves Rybarczyk, New University of Lisbon, Portugal
INFRASTRUCTURE
eNTERFACE?17 will be held in the Digital Creativity Centre located on the campus of the Catholic Portuguese University in the city of Porto, Portugal. The Digital Creativity Centre is a center of competence and creative excellence with an infrastructure equipped with cutting edge technology in the areas of Digital and Interactive Arts, Computer Music, Sound Design, Audiovisual and Cinematic Arts, Computer Animation.
Facilities include experiment spaces, meeting rooms, as well as a Motion Capture (MoCap) Lab equipped with a Vicon Motion Capture System, a Digital and Interactive Arts (Yamaha Disklavier Grand Piano Robotic Performance System, a Notomoton Percussion Robot, two Reactable Live and one Reactable Media Bench Systems, various Microsoft Kinects, Nintendo Wiimotes, LeapMotion sensors, Webcameras, 3d-printers, Arduino and Raspberry Pi systems).
ORGANIZATION
eNTERFACE?17 will be organized and hosted by the Digital Creativity Centre, Universidade Catolica Portuguesa - School of Arts.
The French Phonology Network (Réseau français de phonologie) is launching a call for papers for its 2017 annual conference. Building on the success of the previous conferences organized in Orléans (2010), Tours (2011), Paris (2012), Nantes (2013), Lille (2014), Bordeaux (2015) and Nice (2016), the 2017 edition will be organized by GIPSA-lab and will take place from 5 to 7 July at the Grenoble Alpes University, France.
Keynote speakers ? Sabrina Bendjaballah, LLING & Univ. Nantes ? Monik Charette, SOAS London ? John Harris, UCL London ? Rachid Ridouane, LPP & Univ. Paris 3 Main session Submissions from any school or theoretical framework of phonology are welcome. Topics of interest may relate to phonology in general or in specific language, in synchronic or in diachronic dimensions. Issues focusing on phonology and its interfaces, epistemology, descriptive phonology, experimental phonology, phonological modeling or formalism are awaited. Thematic session This year's conference, we especially encourage submissions focusing on the two following topics: ? Multi-level approach of the phonology-phonetic interface and / or description of minority languages, dialects, spatial variation, phonological changes, language and sound system typologies; ? Development and acquisition of phonological representations.
Abstract submission and review Abstracts can be written in either French or English. Abstracts should not exceed two pages in length (A4 pages, TimesNewRoman or similar, size 11, single-spaced), including references, tables and figures. Anonymous PDF abstracts should mention under the title the request for an oral or poster presentation (or without notice) and should be submitted on the RFP2017 site at the following address: http://rfp2017.sciencesconf.org. All abstracts will be reviewed by at least two referees.
Presentation Oral presentations will be scheduled for 35-minute time slots (25 minutes for presentation and 10 minutes for discussion). A poster session will be set up.
Important dates Call for papers: December 10th 2016 Deadline for submission: March 3rd 2017 Notification of acceptance: April 28th 2017 Conference: July 5th-7th 2017
Scientific Committee J.-P. Angoujard (U. de Nantes, PR) B. Laks (U. Paris 10, PR) X. Barillot (U. de Nice, MCF) N. Lampitelli (U. de Tours, MCF) J.-M. Beltzung (U. de Nantes, MCF) J.-L. Léonard (U. Paris 4, PR) S. Bendjaballah (U. de Nantes, DR) J. Lowenstamm (U. Paris 7, PR) G. Bergounioux (U. d?Orléans, PR) X. Luo (U. d?Orléans, Post-doc) J. Brandao de Carvalho (U. Paris 8, PR) N. Nguyen (U. d?Aix-Marseille, PR) J. Bucci (U. de Grenoble Alpes, Post-doc) R. Noske (U. Lille 3, MCF) E. Caratini (U. de Poitiers, MCF) D. Passino (U. de Nice, PR) C. Dos Santos (U. de Tours, MCF) C. Patin (U. Lille 3, MCF) J. Dufour (U. de Strasbourg, MCF) A. Rialland (U. Paris 3, DR) C. Dugua (U. d?Orléans, MCF) R. Ridouane (U. Paris 3, CR) J. Durand (U. Toulouse 2, PR) O. Rizzolo (U. de Nice, MCF) R. Fathi (U. de Nantes, Post-doc) M. Russo (U. Lyon 3, PR) N. Faust (U. Paris 8, MCF) T. Scheer (U. de Nice, DR) S. Ferré (U. de Tours, MCF) Ph. Ségéral (U. Paris 7, MCF) J.-M. Fournier (U. de Tours, PR) A. Tifrit (U. de Nantes, MCF) D. Le Gac (U. de Rouen, MCF) F. Torres-Tamarit (U. Paris 8, CR) S. Herment (U. d?Aix-Marseille, PR) N. Trapateau (U. de Nice, MCF) M. D?Imperio (U. d?Aix-Marseille, PR) S. Ulfsbjorninn (U. Lyon 3, Post-doc) H. Jacobs (U. Radboud (NL), PR) N. Vallée (U. de Grenoble Alpes, CR) L. Labrune (U. Bordeaux 3, PR) S. Wauquier (U. Paris 8, PR) M. Lahrouchi (U. Paris 8, CR) N. Yamaguchi (U. Paris 3, MCF)
Conference Organizers Responsibles : Nathalie Vallée (CR), Julien Meyer (CR) Permanents : Elisabetta Carpitelli (PR), Giovanni Depau (MCF), Jean-Pierre Lai (IE), Thi Thuy Hien Tran (MCF), Anne Vilain (MCF) Non-permanents : Ekaterina Biteeva Lecoq (IE), Jonathan Bucci (Post-doc), Silvia Gally (Doc), Bénédicte Grandon (Doc)
The SpeD 2017 Organizing Committee invites you to attend the 9th Conference on Speech Technology and Human-Computer Dialogue, at Bucharest, Romania. SpeD 2017 will bring together academics and industry professionals from universities, government agencies and companies to present their achievements in speech technology and related fields.
?SpeD 2017? is a conference and international forum which will reflect some of the latest tendencies in spoken language technology and human-computer dialogue research as well as some of the most recent applications in this area.
?SpeD 2017? is intended to be an IEEE and EURASIP sponsored Conference. As all previous editions since 2009, the Proceedings are intended to be indexed by the IEEE Xplore database and Thomson Conference Proceedings Citation Index.
Organized by
University POLITEHNICA of Bucharest Faculty of Electronics, Telecommunications and Information Technology
Institute for Computer Science ? Romanian Academy, Ia?i Branch
Research Institute for Artificial Intelligence ?Mihai Draganescu?- Romanian Academy, Bucharest
Under the Aegis of
Romanian Academy ? Section of Information Science and Technology
Technical sponsorship
IEEE
The European Association for Signal and Image Processing (EURASIP)
Topics
Speech Analysis, Representations and Models
Spoken Language Recognition and Understanding
Text-to-Speech Synthesis
Machine Translation for Speech
Affective Speech Recognition, Interpretation and Synthesis
Speaker Identification and Verification in Biometric Systems and Security
Audio Based Solutions for Intruder Detection
Algorithms for Acoustic Echo Cancellation
Filtering and Transforms for Speech Technology
Spoken Language Based Systems
Speech Interface Design and Human Factors Engineering
Speech Interface Implementation for Embedded / Network-Based Applications
Natural Language Processing
Speech Data Mining
Spoken Dialogue Systems
Educational/Healthcare Applications
Assistive Technologies
Multimodal Processing
Spoken Language Databases
Speech Analysis for Linguistics and Phonetics
Preliminary Schedule
Submission of camera-ready papers (information for authors is provided on the Conference WEB site): February 13, 2017.
Notification of acceptance and reviewers? comments: April 10, 2017.
Submission of final papers: April 24, 2017.
Conference: July 6-9, 2017.
------------------------
Laurent Besacier
Professeur à l'Univ. Grenoble Alpes (UGA)
Laboratoire d'Informatique de Grenoble (LIG)
Membre Junior de l'Institut Universitaire de France (IUF 2012-2017)
(2017-07-07) Séminaire Traitement de l'Information Multimodale TIM2017, Paris
Appel à communications
Séminaire Traitement de l'Information Multimodale TIM2017, Paris
Dates importantes?:
Soumission des résumés?: au plus tard le 29/01/2017
Notification aux auteurs?: fin 02/2017
Date du séminaire?: du 05 au 07/07/2017
Objectifs?:
Le séminaire Traitement de l?Information Multimodale est organisé chaque année par la Direction Générale de l?Armement (DGA) et rassemble les acteurs industriels, académiques et Défense du traitement de l?information afin de favoriser les échanges au sein de la communauté.
Ce séminaire vise à présenter un panorama des problématiques de recherche scientifique et industrielle au travers de sessions de présentations orales et de posters sur des projets de recherche et développement en cours. Il s?adresse à un public large allant du chercheur confirmé à l?utilisateur final des technologies développées. La présentation de produits existants, déjà commercialisés n?est pas souhaitée.
Le séminaire TIM2017 sera orienté selon trois grands axes?: le traitement automatique des langues (le 05/07/2017), le «?Big Data?» (le 06/07/2017) et le traitement d?images (le 07/07/2017). Dans chacun de ces domaines, le séminaire se focalise sur les technologies susceptibles d?assister les opérateurs dans le traitement de l?information en masse pour extraire du renseignement à forte valeur ajoutée et faire ressortir les informations les plus pertinentes.
Thèmes?:
Traitement automatique des langues?(TAL) :
Traitement de langues à faibles ressources linguistiques
Traitement des langues sans forme écrite normalisée (dont messages de type réseaux sociaux)
Adaptation des modules TAL à des variantes dialectales ou accentuées
Visualisation et interprétation de graphes sociaux (caractérisation de communautés, influenceurs, évolution temporelle,?)
Propagation de l?information, quantification de la véracité de l?information
Détection de signaux faibles
Architectures de gestion de données?:
Garanties de l?intégrité et de la confidentialité des données
Technologies de gestion et de traitement des séries temporelles et spatio-temporelles, caractérisation de comportements normaux/anormaux
Agrégation, fusion et consolidation d?informations multi-sources
Traitement d?images?:
Détection d?images et de vidéos falsifiées
Segmentation d?images et indexation sémantique
Résumé vidéo
Reconnaissance faciale
Apprentissage automatique?(appliqué aux thématiques précédentes) :
Apprentissage profond
Apprentissage non supervisé ou faiblement supervisé, apprentissage actif
Apprentissage par transfert
Contact et soumission
Un résumé des présentations doit être proposé avant le 29 janvier 2017 (1 page maximum, en français de préférence) avec les noms des auteurs des présentations,?en indiquant une préférence entre présentation orale ou poster.
L?envoi des soumissions, ainsi que toute demande d?information, se fait par mail à contact?[at]?tim2017.fr
(2017-07-17) DeepLearn2017, INTERNATIONAL SUMMER SCHOOL ON DEEP LEARNING, Bilbao, Spain
INTERNATIONAL SUMMER SCHOOL ON DEEP LEARNING
DeepLearn 2017 Bilbao, Spain July 17-21, 2017 Organized by: University of Deusto Rovira i Virgili University http://grammars.grlmc.com/DeepLearn2017/ ************************************************************ --- Early registration deadline: May 19, 2017 --- ******************************************************** SCOPE: DeepLearn 2017 will be a research training event with a global scope aiming at updating participants about the most recent advances in the critical and fast developing area of deep learning. This is a branch of artificial intelligence covering a spectrum of current exciting machine learning research and industrial innovation that provides more efficient algorithms to deal with large-scale data in neuroscience, computer vision, speech recognition, language processing, drug discovery, biomedical informatics, recommender systems, learning theory, robotics, games, etc. Renowned academics and industry pioneers will lecture and share their views with the audience. Most deep learning subareas will be displayed, and main challenges identified through 4 keynote lectures, 30 six-hour courses, and 1 round table, which will tackle the most active and promising topics. The organizers are convinced that outstanding speakers will attract the brightest and most motivated students. Interaction will be a main component of the event. An open session will give participants the opportunity to present their own work in progress in 5 minutes. ADDRESSED TO: In principle, graduate students, doctoral students and postdocs will be typical profiles of participants. However, there are no formal pre-requisites for attendance in terms of academic degrees. Since there will be a variety of levels, specific knowledge background may be assumed for some of the courses. DeepLearn 2017 is also appropriate for more senior academics and practitioners who want to keep themselves updated on recent developments and future trends. All will surely find it fruitful to listen and discuss with major researchers, industry leaders and innovators. REGIME: In addition to keynotes, 3-4 courses will run in parallel during the whole event. Participants will be able to freely choose the courses they wish to attend as well as to move from one to another. VENUE: DeepLearn 2017 will take place in Bilbao, the largest city in the Basque Country, famous for its gastronomy and the seat of the Guggenheim Museum. The venue will be: DeustoTech, School of Engineering University of Deusto Avda. Universidades, 24 48014 Bilbao, Spain KEYNOTE SPEAKERS: (to be completed) Richard Socher (Salesforce), Tackling the Limits of Deep Learning PROFESSORS AND COURSES: Narendra Ahuja (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign), [introductory/intermediate] Basics of Deep Learning with Applications to Image Processing, Pattern Recognition and Computer Vision Pierre Baldi (University of California, Irvine), [intermediate/advanced] Deep Learning: Theory and Applications to the Natural Sciences Sven Behnke (University of Bonn), [intermediate] Visual Perception using Deep Convolutional Neural Networks Mohammed Bennamoun (University of Western Australia), [introductory/intermediate] Deep Learning for Computer Vision Hervé Bourlard (Idiap Research Institute), [intermediate/advanced] Deep Sequence Modeling: Historical Perspective and Current Trends Thomas Breuel (NVIDIA Corporation), [intermediate] Segmentation, Processing, and Tracking, with Applications to Video, Gaming, VR, and Self-driving Cars George Cybenko (Dartmouth College), [intermediate] Deep Learning of Behaviors Rina Dechter (University of California, Irvine), [introductory] Algorithms for Reasoning with Probabilistic Graphical Models Li Deng (Microsoft Research), tba Jianfeng Gao (Microsoft Research), [introductory/intermediate] An Introduction to Deep Learning for Natural Language Processing Michael Gschwind (IBM T.J. Watson Research Center), [introductory/intermediate] Deploying Deep Learning Applications at the Enterprise Scale Yufei Huang (University of Texas, San Antonio), [intermediate/advanced] Deep Learning for Precision Medicine and Biomedical informatics Soo-Young Lee (Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology), [intermediate/advanced] Multi-modal Deep Learning for the Recognition of Human Emotions in the Wild Li Erran Li (Columbia University), [intermediate/advanced] Deep Reinforcement Learning: Recent Advances and Frontiers Michael C. Mozer (University of Colorado, Boulder), [introductory/intermediate] Incorporating Domain Bias into Neural Networks Roderick Murray-Smith (University of Glasgow), [intermediate] Applications of Deep Learning Models in Human-Computer Interaction Research Hermann Ney (RWTH Aachen University), [intermediate/advanced] Speech Recognition and Machine Translation: From Statistical Decision Theory to Machine Learning and Deep Neural Networks Jose C. Principe (University of Florida), [intermediate/advanced] Cognitive Architectures for Object Recognition in Video Marc?Aurelio Ranzato (Facebook AI Research), [introductory/intermediate] Learning Representations for Vision, Speech and Text Processing Applications Maximilian Riesenhuber (Georgetown University), [introductory/intermediate] Deep Learning in the Brain Ruslan Salakhutdinov (Carnegie Mellon University), [intermediate/advanced] Foundations of Deep Learning and its Recent Advances Alessandro Sperduti (University of Padua), [intermediate/advanced] Deep Learning for Sequences Jimeng Sun (Georgia Institute of Technology), [introductory] Interpretable Deep Learning Models for Healthcare Applications Julian Togelius (New York University), [intermediate] (Deep) Learning for (Video) Games Joos Vandewalle (KU Leuven), [introductory/intermediate] Data Processing Methods, and Applications of Least Squares Support Vector Machines Ying Nian Wu (University of California, Los Angeles), [introductory/intermediate] Generative Modeling and Unsupervised Learning Eric P. Xing (Carnegie Mellon University), [intermediate/advanced] Statistical Machine Learning Perspectives of Extending Deep Neural Networks: Kernels, Logics, Regularizers, Priors, and Distributed Algorithms Georgios N. Yannakakis (University of Malta), [introductory/intermediate] Deep Learning for Games - But Not for Playing them Scott Wen-tau Yih (Microsoft Research), [introductory/intermediate] Continuous Representations for Natural Language Understanding Richard Zemel (University of Toronto), [introductory/intermediate] Learning to Understand Images and Text OPEN SESSION: An open session will collect 5-minute voluntary presentations of work in progress by participants. They should submit a half-page abstract containing title, authors, and summary of the research to david.silva409 (at) yahoo.com by July 9, 2017. INDUSTRIAL SESSION: A specific session will be devoted to demonstrations of practical uses of deep learning in industrial processes. Companies/people interested in contributing are welcome to submit a 1-page abstract containing the program of the demonstration, the duration requested and the logistics necessary. At least one of the people participating in the demonstration should have registered for the event. Expressions of interest have to be submitted to david.silva409 (at) yahoo.com by July 2, 2017. EMPLOYERS SESSION: Firms searching for personnel well skilled in deep learning will have a space reserved for one-to-one contacts. At least one of the people in charge of the search should have registered for the event. Expressions of interest have to be submitted to david.silva409 (at) yahoo.com by July 2, 2017. ORGANIZING COMMITTEE: Pablo García Bringas (co-chair) José Gaviria Carlos Martín (co-chair) Manuel Jesús Parra Iker Pastor Borja Sanz (co-chair) David Silva REGISTRATION: It has to be done at http://grammars.grlmc.com/DeepLearn2017/registration.php The selection of up to 8 courses requested in the registration template is only tentative and non-binding. For the sake of organization, it will be helpful to have an approximation of the respective demand for each course. Since the capacity of the venue is limited, registration requests will be processed on a first come first served basis. The registration period will be closed and the on-line registration facility disabled when the capacity of the venue will be complete. It is much recommended to register prior to the event. FEES: Fees comprise access to all courses and lunches. There are several early registration deadlines. Fees depend on the registration deadline. ACCOMMODATION: A suggestion for accommodation is available on the website. CERTIFICATE: Participants will be delivered a certificate of attendance indicating the number of hours of lectures. QUESTIONS AND FURTHER INFORMATION: david.silva409 (at) yahoo.com ACKNOWLEDGMENTS: Universidad de Deusto Universitat Rovira i Virgili
(2017-08-14) Course: Machine Learning Applied to Bioinformatics and Speech Technology, Univ. Joensuu, Finland
UEF SUMMER SCHOOL 2017 Joensuu, Finland http://summerschool.uef.fi/ August 14-25, 2017 ***** Registration deadline: May 26, 2017 ***** -o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o Course: Machine Learning Applied to Bioinformatics and Speech Technology http://www.uef.fi/en/web/summerschool/machine-learning-applied-to-bioinformatics-and-speech-technology Course has two options: * Lectures + learning diary (August 14 - 18), total 2 ECTS * Lectures + learning diary + individual project (August 14 - 25), total 5 ECTS Teaching language: English Level: Doctoral, Master University of Eastern Finland (UEF) hosts a number of different summer courses in August 2017. The course on Machine Learning Applied to Bioinformatics and Speech Technology is co-organized by the School of Computing (Speech track) and Institute of Biomedicine (Bioinformatics track). Contact teaching takes place from August 14th to 18th. Individual optional project work is from August 21th to 25th. Contents The first two days include a general introduction to machine learning including topics such as deep learning, Bayesian graphical models and modeling sequential data. Course is intended to be self-contained with no prior knowledge of machine learning required. After the introductory part, the participants will choose one of the alternative course tracks (speech technology or bioinformatics). The lectures are delivered physically in two different locations of the UEF campuses, Joensuu and Kuopio (150 km apart). But it is possible to attend the lectures of either course from both campuses remotely through a video connection provided by UEF. The speech processing teaching takes place in Joensuu and bioinformatics teaching in Kuopio. In the speech/audio track we focus on state-of-the-art automatic speaker verification (ASV) and spoken language identication (LID) technology. In addition to introducing the basic models and software tools for session/channel compensation to increase robustness (e.g. factor analysis and i-vectors), the topics include also audio forensics and speech anti-spoofing (or presentation attack detection) techniques, including the ASVspoof challenge series. Using these techniques system would be able to know whether recorded audio was tampered somehow or that the spoken by a human or produced by a machine. Open-source software tools will also be introduced. The speech track is recommended especially for PhD students (and MSc students close to graduation) who might be already familiar with the basics of speech processing and interested in obtaining a quick overview of both basic principles, state-of-the-art techniques and selected emerging trends in speaker and language recognition. Speech processing confirmed lecturers: Cemal Hanilci, Bursa Technical University, Turkey Ville Hautamäki, University of Eastern Finland (organizer) Tomi Kinnunen, University of Eastern Finland (organizer) Kong Aik Lee, Institute for Infocomm Research, Singapore Modes of study: Lectures (4 days), hands on practicals (1 day), project work (1 week) and learning diary Social program: We will also organise some guided social programme in the evenings and during the weekend. This will include a welcome dinner, a guided city tour by bus, sauna evening, a one-day trip to Koli national park during the weekend etc. The activities will mostly be included in your course fee, but some of them may have a small participation fee. Assessment: pass/fail. Students who pass will receive certificate. Registration: http://www.uef.fi/en/web/summerschool/how-to-apply Registration fee: 500 EUR Accommodation: http://www.uef.fi/en/web/summerschool/accommodation More information: villeh@cs.uef.fi and tkinnu@cs.uef.fi
(2017-08-15 )CfP SigDial 2017 Special Session: Natural Language Generation for Dialogue Systems, Saarbrüken, Germany
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SigDial 2017 Special Session:
Natural Language Generation for Dialogue Systems
First Call for Papers
Paper Submission: 18th April 2017
http://www.sigdial.org/workshops/conference18/
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* MOTIVATION
While natural language generation (NLG) for dialogue interaction has been a long-standing research topic, there has been a recent explosion of work due to industrial interest in conversational assistants such as Alexa, Siri, Cortana and Google Assistant. Recent advances in the field of deep learning together with the availability of large corpora of human dialogues from social media has also contributed to new research techniques for language generation. However, to date, neural methods have not been able to replicate much of the rich dialogue phenomena targeted by previous rule-based, statistical and data-driven approaches for language generation for dialogue.
* TOPIC SUBMISSION
We invite submissions which address specific issues including but not limited to:
- Generation in the context of a dialogue with appropriate use of anaphoric forms, such as pronouns and ellipses;
- Generation of turns where information is structured using rhetorical relations, as in the case of recommendations or other persuasive genres;
- Selection and organization of content in a dialogue turn;
- Sentence planning and lexical choice for dialogue interaction;
- Evaluation of language generation for dialogue systems;
- Corpus-based analyses of human-human dialogue to inform NLG for dialogue systems;
- Critical comparison between capabilities of different kinds of models.
- Providing and investigating new resources, such as data sets and tools.
- We also welcome submissions which make use of the new E2E NLG challenge data set (http://www.macs.hw.ac.uk/InteractionLab/E2E/).
* SUBMISSION FORMAT
Long paper submissions will follow the SigDial 2017 format and will be part of the general conference submission and review system. They will be treated as regular SIGDIAL papers and become archival.
- Long papers must be no longer than eight pages + unlimited pages for references + 2 additional pages for appendix (linguistic examples, algorithms etc.)
- Short position papers (2 pages + unlimited pages for references) with a single point to make, e.g. a proposal for a shared task for NLG for dialogue. These will be presented as short talks or posters, and the papers will be added to the web page for the special session (TBA), but will not count as an archival publication.
* IMPORTANT DATES
We will follow the SigDial 2017 schedule, and papers should be submitted using the SIGDIAL conference submission site. http://www.sigdial.org/workshops/conference18/
Paper Submission Deadline: Tuesday, 18 April 2017 (23:59, GMT-11)
Paper Notification: Friday, 9 June 2017
Final Paper Submission: Friday, 7 July 2017
Conference: Tuesday, 15 August 2017 to Thursday, 17 August 2017
* CONTACT
Marilyn Walker
* ORGANISING COMMITTEE
Marilyn Walker, University of California Santa Cruz (Chair)
Verena Rieser, Heriot-Watt University
Vera Demberg, Universität des Saarlandes
Dietrich Klakow, Universität des Saarlandes
Dilek Hakkani-Tur, Google Research
David M. Howcroft, Universität des Saarlandes
Shereen Oraby, University of California Santa Cruz
PACLING 2017 will be a high-quality, workshop-style conference whose aim is to promote friendly scientific interaction relating to computational linguistics among Pacific Rim countries. The emphasis of the conference is on interdisciplinary scientific exchange demonstrating openness towards original high-quality research including one which might fall outside current dominant schools of thought, and on technological transfer within and across the Pacific region. The conference represents a unique forum for scientific and technological exchange, being smaller than ACL and COLING, and more regional with extensive representation from the Pacific. TOPICS
Substantial, original, and unpublished research is welcome on any topics in computational linguistics, including, but not limited to the following:
Phonology and Phonetics
Morphology and Morphological Analysis
Syntax and Syntactic Analysis
Semantics and Semantic Analysis
Pragmatics and Discourse Analysis
Spoken Language and Dialogue
Language Resources
Corpora and Corpus-based Language Processing
Text and Message Understanding
Text and Message Generation
Information Extraction and Text Mining
Information Retrieval and Question-Answering
Text Summarization
Language Learning
Machine Translation
Natural Language Interfaces
Semantic Web and Semantic Computation
IMPORTANT DATES
Submission deadline: April 19, 2017 Notification of acceptance: May 25, 2017 Camera-ready copy due: July 10, 2017 Conference dates: August 16 - 18, 2017
SUBMISSION OF PAPERS Authors should prepare submissions in English of up to 6 pages including references. Guidelines and style sheets (based on the IEEE format) are available here:
Papers that are being submitted to other conferences, whether verbatim or in essence must declare this fact. If a paper appears at another conference, it must be withdrawn from PACLING 2017. Papers that violate these requirements are subject to rejection without review.
The submitted papers need not be anonymous.
All papers will be submitted electronically in PDF format, through the web-based conference management system called EasyChair. To submit through EasyChair, go to the PACLING 2017 EasyChair page: https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=pacling2017
Login using your existing EasyChair account, or create a new account following the instructions on the site. Once you have logged in, click on the 'New Submission' link located in the top-left corner of the menu bar, and then follow the instructions to submit your paper.
BEST PAPER AWARD AND BEST STUDENT PAPER AWARD Awards for best paper and best student paper will be selected based on the reviews by the program committee.
PUBLICATION All accepted papers will be published in the conference proceedings in CD-ROM and made available on the website (after a given date).
ORGANIZATION
Program Chair: Koiti Hasida, Professor, Social ICT Research Center University of Tokyo
(2017-08-20) CfP INTERSPEECH 2017 Special session on 'Incremental Processing and Responsive Behaviour'
Call for Paper INTERSPEECH 2017 Special session on Incremental Processing and Responsive Behaviour ======================================================================================
Incremental processing ? i. e., the online, and ideally real-time processing of streams of information about an ongoing event, as it happens ? has become a highly relevant research area. Is is particularly true for speech, which is an inherently sequential medium, and in interactive situations, where responsivity is key. Incremental processing techniques are used across speech recognition and synthesis, voice conversion, understanding, generation, syntax parsing, machine translation, and in applications such as dialogue systems, situated and multimodal interaction, robotics, or speech-to-speech translation.
The aspect of incrementality is largely orthogonal to the typical session/topic layout at Interspeech and hence work on incremental processing is usually spread over a multitude of sessions at Interspeech (and related conferences), which leads to a fragmentation of expertise and discussions. Our special session sets out to unite the spread-out field in order to provide a venue for joint discussion of incrementality itself rather than having to focus on the individual problems tackled.
We are inviting researchers interested in incrementality in all its aspects such as: · solving specific problems of automatic speech and language processing in an incremental fashion · methodology and theory of incremental processing including its evaluation · psycholingiustic findings and interaction of modalities · predictive/reactive frameworks and the integration of incrementality into systems · researching the influence on interactions in end-to-end systems (as well as human-human interaction) · reactive/human-centered machine learning · reactive behaviour based on partial understanding, and more.
The topic of our special session is to be connected with a follow-up special issue in Computer, Speech & Language.
We invite you to submit original papers on any of the research themes listed above. When submitting papers, please make sure that you select scientific area topic: [11.13] Special Session on ' Incremental Processing and Responsive Behaviour' in the INTERSPEECH 2017 submission system.
Almost all animals exploit vocal signals for a range of ecologically-motivated purposes: from detecting predators/prey and marking territory, to expressing emotions, establishing social relations and sharing information. Whether it?s a bird raising an alarm, a whale calling to potential partners, a dog responding to human commands, a parent reading a story with a child, or a businessperson accessing stock prices using Siri on an iPhone, vocalisation provides a valuable communications channel through which behaviour may be coordinated and controlled, and information may be distributed and acquired. Indeed, the ubiquity of vocal interaction has led to research across an extremely diverse array of fields, from assessing animal welfare, to understanding the precursors of human language, to developing voice-based human-machine interaction. Clearly, there is potential for cross-fertilisation between disciplines; for example, using robots to investigate contemporary theories of language grounding, using machine learning to analyse different habitats or adding vocal expressivity to the next generation of autonomous social agents. However, many opportunities remain unexplored, not least due to the lack of a suitable forum.
VIHAR-2017 aims to bring together researchers studying vocalisations and speech-based interaction in-and- between humans, animals and robots from a variety of different fields. The workshop is being organised by participants of a recent Dagstuhl Seminar on the same topic, and follows the publication of a short review article: http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/frobt.2016.00061/full. VIHAR-2017 will provide a timely opportunity for scientists and engineers from different fields to share theoretical insights, best practices, tools and methodologies, and to identify common principles underpinning vocal behaviour in a multi-disciplinary environment.
We invite original submissions of four-page INTERSPEECH-style papers (plus one page of references) or two-page extended abstracts (including references) in all areas of vocal interactivity. Suggested workshop topics may include, but are not limited to, the following areas: * physiological and morphological similarities/differences between vocal systems in animals * properties and functions of animal signals * evolution of vocal interactivity * vocal imitation and learning * conveyance of emotion * comparative analyses of human and animal vocalisations * use of vocalisation * vocal interactivity between non-conspecifics * spoken language systems * technology-based research methods
Key Dates: Submission deadline - 2 June 2017 Notification of acceptance - 30 June 2017 Workshop - 25-26 August 2017
Organisers: Robert Eklund, Linköping University Angela Dassow, Carthage College Ricard Marxer, University of Sheffield Roger K. Moore, University of Sheffield Bhiksha Raj, Carnegie Mellon University Rita Singh, Carnegie Mellon University Serge Thill, University of Skövde Benjamin Weiss, Technical University of Berlin
If you wish to join the VIHAR community, please subscribe to our mailing list by entering your e-mail address at http://www.freelists.org/list/vihar and then responding to the confirmation e-mail that you will receive from the list server.
AVSP is a uniquely interdisciplinary conference, focusing on the effects of auditory and visual speech information on human perception, machine recognition, and human-machine interaction. AVSP conferences attract many researchers from various fields, such as psychology, computer engineering, neuroscience, linguistics, and robotic engineering. AVSP 2017 is a satellite workshop of INTERSPEECH 2017, one of the largest conferences on speech communication.
The AVSP conference will be held in Stockholm, Sweden, August 25 & 26, 2017.
CONFERENCE TOPICS
Submission of papers are invited in all areas of auditory-visual speech processing and facial animation and including but not limited to:
- Human recognition of audio-visual speech
- Machine recognition of audio-visual speech
- Human and machine models of multimodal integration
- Multimodal processing of spoken events
- Cross-linguistic studies
- Developmental studies
- Role of gestures accompanying speech
- Modeling, synthesis and recognition of facial gestures
- Audio-visual speech synthesis
- Audio-visual prosody
- Emotion and Expressivity modeling
- Neuropsychology and neurophysiology of audio-visual speech processing
- Scene analysis using audio and visual speech information
INVITED SPEAKER
Sonja A Kotz
Professor and Chair in Neuropsychology and Translational Cognitive Neuroscience
(2017-08-27) CfP 20th International Conference on TEXT, SPEECH and DIALOGUE (TSD 2017), Praha (Prague), Czech Republic
TSD 2017 - PRELIMINARY CALL FOR PAPERS **************************************************************************
The twentieth anniversary International Conference on TEXT, SPEECH and DIALOGUE (TSD 2017) Praha (Prague), Czech Republic August 27-31, 2017 http://www.tsdconference.org
TSD HIGHLIGHTS
* Invited speakers: Tomas Mikolov and other eminent personages with various expertise covering speech modeling, acoustic-phonetic decoding, dialogue systems, and semantics have been asked to give their respective pieces of speech. * TSD is traditionally published by Springer-Verlag and regularly listed in all major citation databases: Thomson Reuters Conference Proceedings Citation Index, DBLP, SCOPUS, EI, INSPEC, COMPENDEX, etc. * TSD offers high-standard transparent review process - double blind, final reviewers discussion. * TSD will take place in the historical centre of Prague, the Capital of the Czech Republic in co-operation with the Institute of Formal and Applied Linguistics, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics of the Charles University. * TSD provides an all-service package (conference access and material, all meals, one social event, etc.) for an easily affordable fee starting at 290 EUR for students and 360 EUR for full participants.
TSD SERIES
TSD series have evolved as a prime forum for interaction between researchers in both spoken and written language processing from all over the world. Proceedings of the TSD conference form a book published by Springer-Verlag in their Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence (LNAI) series. The TSD proceedings are regularly indexed by Thomson Reuters Conference Proceedings Citation Index. LNAI series are listed in all major citation databases such as DBLP, SCOPUS, EI, INSPEC, or COMPENDEX.
TOPICS
Topics of the 20th anniversary conference will include (but are not limited to):
Speech Recognition (multilingual, continuous, emotional speech, handicapped speaker, out-of-vocabulary words, alternative way of feature extraction, new models for acoustic and language modelling).
Corpora and Language Resources (monolingual, multilingual, text, and spoken corpora, large web corpora, disambiguation, specialized lexicons, dictionaries).
Speech and Spoken Language Generation (multilingual, high fidelity speech synthesis, computer singing).
Tagging, Classification and Parsing of Text and Speech (multilingual processing, sentiment analysis, credibility analysis, automatic text labeling, summarization, authorship attribution).
Semantic Processing of Text and Speech (information extraction, information retrieval, data mining, semantic web, knowledge representation, inference, ontologies, sense disambiguation, plagiarism detection).
Integrating Applications of Text and Speech Processing (machine translation, natural language understanding, question-answering strategies, assistive technologies).
Automatic Dialogue Systems (self-learning, multilingual, question-answering systems, dialogue strategies, prosody in dialogues).
Multimodal Techniques and Modelling (video processing, facial animation, visual speech synthesis, user modelling, emotion and personality modelling).
The official language of the event is English, however, papers on issues related to text and speech processing in languages other than English are strongly encouraged.
IMPORTANT DATES
March 31, 2017 ............ Deadline for submission of contributions May 10, 2017 .............. Notification of acceptance or rejection May 31, 2017 .............. Deadline for submission of camera-ready papers
August 27-31, 2017 ........ TSD2017 conference date
The proceedings will be provided on flash drives in form of navigable content. Printed books will be available for extra fee.
CONFERENCE FEES
The conference fee depends on the date of payment and on the participant's status (full or student). It includes one copy of the conference proceedings (on a USB flash drive), refreshments/coffee breaks, lunches and dinners, opening dinner, welcome party, mid-conference social event admissions, and organizing costs. In order to lower the fee as much as possible, the accommodation and the conference trip are not included in it this time.
Full participant: early registration by May 31, 2017 - CZK 10 000 (approx. 360 EUR) late registration by August 1, 2017 - CZK 11 000 (approx. 400 EUR) on-site registration - CZK 12 000 (approx. 444 EUR)
Student (reduced): early registration by May 31, 2017 - CZK 8 000 (approx. 290 EUR) late registration by August 1, 2017 - CZK 8 700 (approx. 322 EUR) on-site registration - CZK 10 000 (approx. 360 EUR)
Please, keep in mind that the fees are preliminary and they may slightly change in the future. We are also doing our best to find a way to reduce the fees for students.
LOCATION
Praha (Prague)--also called The City of a Hundred Spires or The Heart of Europe--is situated in the very centre of Bohemia on the banks of the river Vltava. There live more than 1.2 million people in the metropolitan area. Thus, Praha is considered the centre of science, higher education, culture, economy and authorities.
The city is divided into ten districts. Each of them offers its own charming atmosphere predicated upon its rich history. A good example can be the Jewish Quarter (Josefov) known especially for the legend of Golem and famous writer Franz Kafka. Then, walking the Parizska street (said to be the most luxurious street in the city), there is the Old Town Square. One of the most important squares of the city renowned for the rare Prague Astronomical Clock (Orloj), number of galleries, Bethlehem Chapel and a monument of religious reformer Jan Hus.
The next place of interest can be found in the area of the New Town. The Wenceslas square with the monument of St. Wenceslas, the patron saint of the Czech state, is the longest square of the republic. Its capacity is fully used by various shops, restaurants, clubs and street artists. Also the renaissance revival-styled building of National Museum, which is now under reconstruction, is situated on the upper end of the square.
Modern art and architecture together with technical mastery demonstration are represented by the Zizkov Television Tower, the Dancing House (Fred and Ginger Building) or the Stefanik's Observatory on the Petrin hill located in the neighbourhood of the quarter Hradcany. Also Krizik's light fountain or Industrial Palace in the area of the Holesovice Showground are worth seeing.
However, the dominant feature of the skyline is still created by the Prague Castle and the Gothic St. Vitus Cathedral spires. The Golden Lane heading down to the Lesser Town shows the tiny and colorful medieval houses. There are many bridges connecting the banks of the Vltava River.
However, only one of them is well known in the whole world--the Charles bridge. Czech King and Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV promoted its construction in the 14th century. The bridge is 520 metres long and stands for a connection between the Lesser Town and the Old Town. It was built in the Gothic style as well as the St. Vitus Cathedral.
Charles IV was also the founder of the University, which now proudly bears his name--The Charles University. It is one the world's oldest universities and with 17 faculties, 3 institutes, 6 centres of teaching, research and development it is also the largest and best rated university in the Czech Republic. The students can choose some of the 642 courses within 300 of accredited degree programmes in the field of medicine, law, theology, pharmacy, arts, science, mathematics and physics, education, social sciences, physical education and sports, and humanities.
We are justifiably very proud of the fact that the campus of the Charles University is going to host the TSD2017 conference.
ABOUT CONFERENCE
The conference is organized by the Faculty of Applied Sciences, University of West Bohemia, Pilsen, the Faculty of Informatics, Masaryk University, Brno, and the Institute of Formal and Applied Linguistics, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics of the Charles University.
The TSD2017 organizing committee has again applied for TSD2017 to be recognized as an INTERSPEECH 2017 satellite event.
Venue: Faculty of Mathematics and Physics of the Charles University Mala Strana Campus - 'S' Building Malostranske nam. 2/25 CZ-118 00 Praha 1
Accommodation: Orea Hotel Pyramida **** Belohorska 24 CZ-169 00 Praha 6
CONTACT
The preferred way of contacting the conference organizing committee is writing an e-mail to: Mrs Romana Strapkova, TSD2017 Conference Secretary E-mail: tsd2017@tsdconference.org Phone: (+420) 736 664 500
All paper correspondence regarding the conference should be addressed to:
TSD2017 - KIV Fakulta aplikovanych ved Zapadoceska univerzita v Plzni Univerzitni 8 CZ-306 14 Plzen Czech Republic
Fax: (+420) 377 632 402 -- Please, mark the faxed material with large capitals 'TSD' on top.
EUSIPCO 2017 CALL FOR PAPERS KOS ISLAND, GREECE 28th AUGUST- 2nd SEPTEMBER 2017
The 25th European Signal Processing Conference (EUSIPCO 2017) will be held in the Greek island of Kos from August 28 to September 2, 2017, at the Kos International Convention Center. The flagship conference of the European Association for Signal Processing (EURASIP) will offer a comprehensive technical program addressing all the latest developments in research and technology for signal processing and its applications. It will feature world-class speakers, oral and poster sessions, keynotes and plenaries, exhibitions, demonstrations, tutorials and satellite workshops, and is expected to attract many leading researchers and industry figures from all over the world.
Technical scope: We invite the submission of original, unpublished technical papers on topics including but not limited to: - Audio and acoustic signal processing - Speech and language processing - Image and video processing - Multimedia signal processing - Signal processing theory and methods - Sensor array and multichannel signal processing - Signal processing for communications - Radar and sonar signal processing - Signal processing over graphs and networks - Nonlinear signal processing - Statistical signal processing - Compressed sensing and sparse modeling - Optimization methods - Machine learning - Bio-medical image and signal processing - Signal processing for computer vision and robotics - Information forensics and security - Signal processing for power systems - Signal processing for education - Bioinformatics and genomics - Signal processing for big data - Signal processing for the internet of things - Design and implementation of signal processing systems - Other signal processing areas
Accepted papers will be included in IEEE Xplore®. EURASIP Society enforces a ?no-show? policy. Procedures to submit papers, proposals for special sessions, tutorials and satellite workshops are detailed at the EUSIPCO website (www.eusipco2017.org).
** IMPORTANT DATES ** Special Session proposals: 30 December 2016 (closed) Satellite Workshop proposals: 20 February 2017 Tutorial proposals: 5 March 2017 Full paper submissions: 5 March 2017 Notification of paper acceptance: 25 May 2017 Camera-ready papers: 17 June 2017
STUDENT PAPER AWARDS: ?EUSIPCO Best Student Paper Awards? will be presented at the conference banquet. Papers will be selected by a committee composed of area and technical chairs.
PLACE: Kos has direct airport connections to many European cities and is located in the middle of the Dodecanese group of islands at the southeast part of the Aegean archipelagos. Rich in historic heritage, it has been a crossroad of many civilizations and was the birthplace of Hippocrates, the father of western medicine, and his ancient school of medicine. It offers a cosmopolitan mix of a vibrant city lifestyle, idyllic beaches, historic tours, easy access to other Greek islands and many other Mediterranean attractions.
TUTORIAL AND SPECIAL SESSION PROPOSALS: Tutorials will be held on August 28, 2017. Brief tutorial proposals should include title, outline, contact information, biography and selected publications for the presenter(s), and a description of the tutorial and material to be distributed to participants. Special session proposals should include title, rationale, session outline, contact information, and a list of invited papers.
SATELLIT? WORKSHOP PROPOSALS: The 2017 edition of EUSIPCO is proud to organize a full day of thematic workshops after the end of the main conference, which will provide a forum to participate in specific scientific events and present research focused on current innovative topics in signal processing technology and its extension to other fields.
3 MINUTE THESIS (3MT): EUSIPCO 2017 is offering a 3 Minutes Thesis contest, where PhD students have three minutes to present a compelling oration on their thesis and its significance. It is an exercise for students to consolidate their ideas so they can present them concisely to an audience specialized in different signal processing fields.
Please refer to the EUSIPCO 2017 website for additional information.
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE: GENERAL CHAIRS Petros Maragos, National Technical University of Athens, Greece Sergios Theodoridis, National Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece
TECHNICAL PROGRAM CHAIRS Konstantinos Diamantaras, Alexander Tech. Educ. Inst. of Thessaloniki, Greece Stefanos Kollias, National Technical University of Athens, Greece Constantine Kotropoulos, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece Gerasimos Potamianos, University of Thessaly, Greece
PLENARY CHAIRS Nikos Sidiropoulos, University of Minnesota, USA Shri Narayanan, University of Southern California, USA
TUTORIAL CHAIRS Béatrice Pesquet-Popescu, Télécom ParisTech, France Aggelos Pikrakis, University of Piraeus, Greece
WORKSHOP CHAIRS Kostas Berberidis, University of Patras, Greece Iasonas Kokkinos, CentraleSupelec, France
FINANCE CHAIR Costas Tzafestas, National Technical University of Athens, Greece
PUBLICATION CHAIRS Petros Boufounos, Mitsubishi Electric Research Labs, USA Elias Manolakos, National Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece
LOCAL ARRANGEMENTS CHAIR Giorgos Stamou, National Technical University of Athens, Greece
PUBLICITY CHAIR Panagiotis Tsakalides University of Crete, Greece
INTERNATIONAL LIAISONS North America: Georgios Giannakis, University of Minnesota, USA South America: Paulo Diniz, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Asia: Hideaki Sakai, Kyoto University, Japan EuCNC: Luis M. Correia, IST-University of Lisbon, Portugal
Organizing Tutorials in the 25th European Signal Processing Conference, EUSIPCO 2017, Kos island, Greece (www.eusipco2017.org) .
Prospective tutorial speakers are invited to submit their proposals via e-mail in PDF by February 17, 2017, to the Tutorials Chairs, Béatrice Pesquet-Popescu and Aggelos Pikrakis (tutorials@eusipco2017.org), indicating:
- Title for the proposed tutorial, its outline and motivation
- List of presenters, including their CVs in a total of at most two pages
- A short description of the tutorial goal, content and the material to be covered
EUSIPCO'2017 tutorial proposals will be judged notably by their technical quality, relevance and timeliness of the topic, quality of the proposal, qualification of the speakers, and presence of similar topics or same speakers at recent EUSIPCOs or other conferences.
Eight half-day tutorials are foreseen which will be held on Monday, August 28, 2017. Tutorials with less than 10 registrations a week after the early registration deadline will not be run unless otherwise explicitly decided by the Tutorials Chairs.
For details regarding the Tutorial Proposal Form, please visit:
We solicit proposals for half- or full-day workshops that will be held together with the European Signal Processing Conference (EUSIPCO) in Kos Island, Greece, from August 28 to September 2, 2017.
Workshops will take place on Saturday, September 2, 2017, at the same venue as the main conference, that is the Kos International Convention Center.
We welcome proposals on emerging topics that are not anticipated to be fully explored in the main conference, as well as topics of focused interest, including presentations related to international, European and bilateral projects, or other collaborative projects.
The purpose of workshops is to provide a comprehensive forum and encourage in-depth discussion of various technical and application issues in our research field. Workshop registration and venue will be handled as part of the main conference by the EUSIPCO organizers.
The topic coverage, the proposers? credential, the interested audience, and relevance of the topic will all be considered in the selection process. Proposers may be asked to provide additional information, modify part of the proposals, or combine with another one.
Workshop proceedings will be handled by EURASIP and will be publicly available through the repository of EURASIP. Workshop organizers, who have followed a peer-review process and wish to have proceedings, should meet the camera-ready deadline for workshop papers, which is anticipated to be on July 3, 2017. The published workshop papers should follow the EUSIPCO template with a maximum number of pages that will be defined by the Workshop organizers (but it should not be more than 8 pages).
Proposals should be submitted by email to workshops@eusipco2017.org by February 20, 2017. The candidate workshop organizers will be notified of the decision on February 27, 2017.
Proposals should be in PDF format and include the following information:
-Workshop title.
-Proposers? names, titles, affiliations, and primary contact email.
-Experience that makes the proposers well suited for organizing the workshop.
-Topics that will be covered and relevance to the signal processing community.
-Program outline (including preference for half- or full-day event, and if appropriate estimated numbers of orals, posters, and invited talks).
-Names and bios of any tentative/confirmed invited speakers.
-Anticipated target audience as well as expected number of attendees.
-Any special space or equipment requests.
Organizers of each accepted proposal are expected to announce a Call-for-Papers including basic information about the Woskshop (description, main topics, Organizing and Program Committees, important dates).
Organizing Special Sessions in the 25th European Signal Processing Conference, EUSIPCO 2017, Kos island, Greece (www.eusipco2017.org) .
Prospective Researchers are invited to submit proposals for Special Sessions related to an emerging area in signal processing and to its applications by December 12th 2016, via e-mail in PDF to the Special Session chairs Alex Potamianos and Maurizio Omologo (special_sessions@eusipco2017.org).
EUSIPCO has an excellent track record over the years for organizing Special Sessions in new or emerging areas. This year we are seeking innovative, high-quality and potentially interdisciplinary proposals for Special Sessions that complement the regular program of the conference. Special Sessions should be focused and provide both an overview of the state-of-the-art, as well as highlight the most promising research directions, trends and challenges in the proposed field of signal processing.
Proposers should submit the following information with their submission:
Special Session title
Short description of proposed field (one paragraph)
Novelty and motivation (one to two paragraphs), including why this topic is of interest to the EUSIPCO community
Short biography of the organizers
List of four (4) contributed papers (titles, authors w. affiliations, and a short abstract), excluding state-of-the art review and papers contributed by organizers
Proposals will be evaluated based on topic novelty and associated impact, organizing committee qualifications, as well as the proposed list of contributed papers.
Special Session submissions at EUSIPCO 2017 are reviewed via the same exact process as submissions to the regular program, and papers are expected to meet the same quality standards. For Special Sessions that are somewhat undersubscribed (due to paper rejections or limited number of submissions), an effort will be made to identify regular submission papers to complete the session, as deemed appropriate by the conference organizers. If a Special Session is seriously undersubscribed the Special Session may be canceled, in which case the accepted papers from the canceled Special Session will be placed into the regular program.
We solicit proposals for half- or full-day workshops that will be held together with the European Signal Processing Conference (EUSIPCO) in Kos Island, Greece, from August 28 to September 2, 2017.
Workshops will take place on Saturday, September 2, 2017, at the same venue as the main conference, that is the Kos International Convention Center.
We welcome proposals on emerging topics that are not anticipated to be fully explored in the main conference, as well as topics of focused interest, including presentations related to international, European and bilateral projects, or other collaborative projects.
The purpose of workshops is to provide a comprehensive forum and encourage in-depth discussion of various technical and application issues in our research field. Workshop registration and venue will be handled as part of the main conference by the EUSIPCO organizers.
The topic coverage, the proposers? credential, the interested audience, and relevance of the topic will all be considered in the selection process. Proposers may be asked to provide additional information, modify part of the proposals, or combine with another one.
Workshop proceedings will be handled by EURASIP and will be publicly available through the repository of EURASIP. Workshop organizers, who have followed a peer-review process and wish to have proceedings, should meet the camera-ready deadline for workshop papers, which is anticipated to be on July 3, 2017. The published workshop papers should follow the EUSIPCO template with a maximum number of pages that will be defined by the Workshop organizers (but it should not be more than 8 pages).
Proposals should be submitted by email to workshops@eusipco2017.org by January 20, 2017. The candidate workshop organizers will be notified of the decision on February 25, 2017.
Proposals should be in PDF format and include the following information:
-Workshop title.
-Proposers? names, titles, affiliations, and primary contact email.
-Experience that makes the proposers well suited for organizing the workshop.
-Topics that will be covered and relevance to the signal processing community.
-Program outline (including preference for half- or full-day event, and if appropriate estimated numbers of orals, posters, and invited talks).
-Names and bios of any tentative/confirmed invited speakers.
-Anticipated target audience as well as expected number of attendees.
-Any special space or equipment requests.
Organizers of each accepted proposal are expected to announce a Call-for-Papers including basic information about the Woskshop (description, main topics, Organizing and Program Committees, important dates).
April 15, 2017 ......... Submission of full papers (final date)
May 15, 2017 ............. Notification of acceptance
May 26, 2017 ............. Final papers (camera ready)
May 26, 2017 ............. Early registration
Sept 12-16, 2017 ??? Conference dates
TOPICS
The SPECOM conference is devoted to issues of human-machine interaction, particularly:
Affective computing; Applications for human-machine interaction; Audio-visual speech processing; Automatic language identification; Corpus linguistics and linguistic processing; Forensic speech investigations and security systems; Multichannel signal processing; Multimedia processing; Multimodal analysis and synthesis; Signal processing and feature extraction; Speaker identification and diarization; Speaker verification systems; Speech analytics and audio mining; Speech and language resources; Speech dereverberation; Speech disorders and voice pathologies; Speech driving systems in robotics; Speech enhancement; Speech perception; Speech recognition and understanding; Speech translation automatic systems; Spoken dialogue systems; Spoken language processing; Text mining and sentiment analysis; Text-to-speech and speech-to-text systems; Virtual and augmented reality.
Special Session 1: Natural Language Processing for Social Media Analysis
The exploitation of natural language from social media data is an intriguing task in the fields of text mining and natural language processing (NLP), with plenty of applications in social sciences and social media analytics. In this special session, we call for research papers in the broader field of NLP techniques for social media analysis. The topics of interest include (but are not limited to): sentiment analysis in social media and beyond (e.g., stance identification, sarcasm detection, opinion mining), computational sociolinguistics (e.g., identification of demographic information such as gender, age), and NLP tools for social media mining (e.g., topic modeling for social media data, text categorization and clustering for social media).
Organisers:
Vasiliki Simaki and Carita Paradis (Lund University, Sweden)
Special Session 2: Multilingual and Low-Resourced Languages Speech Processing in Human-Computer Interaction
Multilingual speech processing has been an active topic for many years. Over the last few years, the availability of big data in a vast variety of languages and the convergence of speech recognition and synthesis approaches to statistical parametric techniques (mainly deep learning neural networks) have put this field in the center of research interest, with a special attention for low- or even zero-resourced languages. In this special session, we call for research papers in the field of multilingual speech processing. The topics include (but are not limited to): multilingual speech recognition and understanding, dialectal speech recognition, cross-lingual adaptation, text-to-speech synthesis, spoken language identification, speech-to-speech translation, multi-modal speech processing, keyword spotting, emotion recognition and deep learning in speech processing.
Organisers:
Alexandros Lazaridis (Idiap Research Institute, Switzerland)
Ivan Himawan (Queensland University of Technology, Australia)
Blaise Potard (CereProc Ltd, Edinburgh, UK)
Kate Knill (Cambridge University Engineering Department)
Peter Bell (University of Edinburgh, UK)
Special Session 3: Real-Life Challenges in Voice and Multimodal Biometrics
Complex passwords or cumbersome dongles are now obsolete. Biometric technology offers a secure and user friendly solution to authenticate and have been employed in various real-life scenarios. This special session seeks to bring together researchers, professionals, and practitioners to present and discuss recent developments and challenges in Real-Life applications of biometrics. Topics of interest include (but are not limited to):
Biometric systems and applications; Identity management and biometrics; Fraud prevention; Anti-spoofing methods; Privacy protection of biometric systems; Uni-modalities, e.g. voice, face, fingerprint, iris, hand geometry, palm print and ear biometrics; Behavioural biometrics; Soft-biometrics; Multi-biometrics; Novel biometrics; Ethical and societal implications of biometric systems and applications.
Organisers:
Saeid Safavi (School of Engineering and Technology, University of Hertfordshire, UK)
Lily Meng (School of Engineering and Technology, University of Hertfordshire, UK)
Maryam Najafian (CSAIL Lab, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA)
Mohamad Hassan Bahari (Centre for processing speech and images, KU Leuven, Belgium)
Abosoud Hanani (Department of Computer Systems Engineering, Birzeit University, Palestine)
Hossein Zeinali (Computer and Engineering Department, Sharif University of Technology, Iran)
Invited Speakers
Prof Mark Gales, University of Cambridge: ?Low-Resource Speech Recognition and Keyword-Spotting?.
Prof Björn Schuller, University of Passau and Imperial College London: ?Big Data, Deep Learning ? At the Edge of X-Ray Speaker Analysis?.
(2017-09-20) 11th Oxford Dsfluency Conference (ODC), Oxford, UK
In 2017 the goal of the 11th Oxford Dysfluency Conference (ODC) is to encourage discussion and debate that will challenge and enhance our perspectives and understanding of research; the nature of stuttering and / or cluttering; and management across the ages.
We would like to remind you to submit your oral and poster abstracts on the conference topics below. Please submit via the abstract submission system by the 31 March 2017.
New perspectives on assessment and therapy: -Issues, variables, and controversies in assessment and outcome
in children
in adolescents
in adults
Supporting the next generation of clinicians and researchers
We are giving junior researchers at the start of their research career the opportunity to present and discuss their research plans or current results to a panel of international specialists in a supportive, constructive, and dynamic environment. For more information please visit our website.
We look forward to meeting you in Oxford!
Regards,
Conference Chairs Sharon Millard, The Michael Palin Centre for Stammering, UK Shelley B. Brundage, George Washington University, USA
To receive email updates for this event please sign up now! For further information and to register for email updates visit: www.dysfluencyconference.com
Convenor: Robert Fuchs (Hong Kong Baptist University)
Speech rhythm has long been recognised as an important supra-segmental category of speech, yet its measurement, relevance and the theoretical soundness of the concept continue to be hotly debated. The arguably most widely supported approach considers speech rhythm to consist of a continuum ranging from (1) a syllable-timed pole, with relatively small differences in prominence between syllables, to (2) a stress-timed pole, with relatively large differences in prominence between syllables. Most L1 varieties of English are widely regarded to be more stress-timed than most L2 and learner varieties, and this is supported by a considerable amount of empirical evidence (e.g. Deterding 1994, 2001, Fuchs 2016, Gut 2005, Gut and Milde 2002, Low 1998).
Yet, upon closer inspection, many of the concepts underlying this research appear to be contested. For one, L1 varieties of English are themselves heterogeneous in their rhythm. There is, for example, regional variation, with some dialects spoken in the British Isles being more syllable-timed than others (Ferragne 2008, Ferragne and Pellegrino 2004, White and Matty 2007a, 2007b, White et al. 2007). Similarly, in L2 varieties, sociolinguistic differences such as that between acrolect and basilect might go hand in hand with a difference in speech rhythm. As for learner Englishes, while there is good evidence of the transfer of rhythmic characteristics from L1 to L2 (e.g. Dellwo et al. 2009, Gut 2009, Jang 2008, Sarmah et al. 2009), more research is needed to show that this has consequences in terms of foreign accent and accent recognition. More generally, research on speech rhythm would benefit from studies showing that quantitative measures of speech rhythm (so-called rhythm metrics) are perceptually relevant and psychologically ?real? in the sense that what is measured is reflected in a certain kind of percept. Finally, the very nature and reliability of these rhythm metrics has been discussed extensively, but arguably inconclusively, in the past years, with some researchers attempting to identify those duration-based metrics that are most reliable (White and Mattys 2007a, White et al.2007, Wiget et al. 2010), others concluding that none of them are reliable (Arvaniti 2009, 2012, Arvaniti et al. 2008), and yet others suggesting metrics that focus on acoustic correlates of prominence other than duration, such as intensity (Fuchs 2016, He 2012, Low 1998), loudness (Fuchs 2014a), f0 (Cumming 2010, 2011, Fuchs 2014b) and sonority (Galves et al. 2012).
In order to address these issues, this workshop aims to bring together researchers working on one or more of the following aspects:
Applications of rhythm metrics that measure speech rhythm based on acoustic correlates of prominence other than duration
Comparative tests of the validity and reliability of existing rhythm metrics
Perceptual relevance and psychological reality of speech rhythm
Relevance of speech rhythm in Second Language Acquisition/learner Englishes, e.g. its contribution to foreign accent as well as pedagogical approaches
Differences in speech rhythm between varieties previously thought to be in the same 'rhythm class'
Sociolinguistic relevance of speech rhythm in indexing e.g. lectal differences or ethnic subvarieties within the same national variety of English
Apart from addressing one or more of the issues above, papers need be concerned with (a variety of) English or a language contact situation involving English (in keeping with the scope of the conference).
The workshop will consist of full papers and work in progress reports, which will be allotted 20 minutes for presentation (plus 10 minutes for discussion). The deadline for submission of abstracts (ca. 500 words, excluding title, references and keywords) is 15 December 2016. Notification of acceptance will be sent out by the end of January 2017. Abstracts should be sent to rfuchs@hkbu.edu.hk .
References
Arvaniti, Amalia. 2009. Rhythm, timing and the timing of rhythm. Phonetica 66(1/2): 46?63.
Arvaniti, Amalia. 2012. The usefulness of metrics in the quantification of speech rhythm. Journal of Phonetics 40: 351?373.
Arvaniti, Amalia, Tristie Ross, and Naja Ferjan. 2008. On the reliability of rhythm metrics. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 124(4): 2495.Dellwo, Volker, Francisco Gutiérrez Diez, and Nuria Gavalda. 2009. The development of measurable speech rhythm in Spanish speakers of English. In Actas de XI Simposio Internacional de Comunicacion Social, Santiago de Cuba, 594?597.
Cumming, Ruth E. 2010. The language-specific integration of pitch and duration. PhD thesis. University of Cambridge.
Cumming, Ruth E. 2011. Perceptually informed quantification of speech rhythm in pairwise variability indices. Phonetica 68(4): 256?277.
Deterding, David. 1994. The rhythm of Singapore English. In Proceedings of the fifth Australian international conference on speech science and technology, ed. Roberto Togneri, 316?321. Perth: Uniprint.
Deterding, David. 2001. The measurement of rhythm: A comparison of Singapore and British English. Journal of Phonetics 29: 217?230.
Ferragne, Emmanuel. 2008. Etude Phonétique des Dialectes Modernes de l?Anglais des Iles Britanniques: Vers l?Identification Automatique du Dialecte. PhD thesis. Université Lumière Lyon 2.
Ferragne, Emmanuel, and François Pellegrino. 2004. A comparative account of the suprasegmental and rhythmic features of British English dialects. Actes de Modelisations pour l?Identification des Langues, Paris, 121?126.
Fuchs, Robert. 2014a. Integrating variability in loudness and duration in a multidimensional model of speech rhythm: Evidence from Indian English and British English. In Proceedings of speech prosody 7, Dublin, ed. Nick Campbell, Dafydd Gibbon, and Daniel Hirst, 290?294.
Fuchs, Robert. 2014b. Towards a perceptual model of speech rhythm: Integrating the influence of f0 on perceived duration. In Proceedings of interspeech 2014, ed. Haizhou Li, Helen Meng, Bin Ma, Eng Siong Chng, and Lei Xie, Singapore, 1949?1953.
Fuchs, Robert. 2016. Speech Rhythm in Varieties of English: Evidence from Educated Indian English and British English. Singapore: Springer.
Galves, Antonio, Jesus Garcia, Denise Duarte, and Charlotte Galves. 2002. Sonority as a basis for rhythmic class discrimination. In Proceedings of speech prosody 2002, Aix-en-Provence, 323?326.
Gut, Ulrike. 2005. Nigerian English prosody. English World-Wide 26(2): 153?177.
Gut, Ulrike. 2009. Non-native speech. A corpus-based analysis of phonological and phonetic properties of L2 English and German. Frankfurt: Peter Lang.
Gut, Ulrike, and Jan-Torsten Milde. 2002. The prosody of Nigerian English. In Proceedings of the speech prosody 2002 conference, ed. Bel Bell and Isabelle Marlien, 367?370. Aix-en-Provence: Laboratoire Parole et Langage.
He, Lei. 2012. Syllabic intensity variations as quantification of speech rhythm: Evidence from both L1 and L2. In Proceedings of the 6th international conference on speech prosody, Shanghai, 22?26 May 2012, ed. Qiuwu Ma, Hongwei Ding, and Daniel Hirst, 466?469. Shanghai: Tongji University Press.
Jang, Tae-Yeoub. 2008. Speech rhythm metrics for automatic scoring of English speech by Korean EFL learners. Malsori Speech Sounds 66: 41?59.
Low, Ee Ling. 1998. Prosodic Prominence in Singapore English. PhD thesis. University of Cambridge.
Sarmah, Priyankoo, Divya Verma Gogoi, and Caroline Wiltshire. 2009. Thai English. Rhythm and vowels. English World-Wide 30(2): 196?217.
White, Laurence, and Sven L. Mattys. 2007a. Calibrating rhythm: First language and second language studies. Journal of Phonetics 35(4): 501?522.
White, Laurence, and Sven L. Mattys. 2007b. Rhythmic typology and variation in first and second languages. Segmental and Prosodic Issues in Romance Phonology 282: 237?257.
White, Laurence, Sven L. Mattys, Lucy Series, and Suzi Gage. 2007. Rhythm metrics predict rhythmic discrimination. In Proceedings of the 16th international congress of phonetic sciences, Saarbrücken, 1009?1012.
Wiget, Klaus, Laurence White, Barbara Schuppler, Izabelle Grenon, Oleysa Rauch, and Sven L. Mattys. 2010. How stable are acoustic metrics of contrastive speech rhythm? Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 127(3): 1559?1569.
(2017-10-16) 11th International Seminar on Speech Production (ISSP-2017), Tianjin, China
We take great pleasure to invite you to submit research article in the 11th International Seminar on Speech Production (ISSP-2017) which will be held on October 16-19, 2017 in Tianjin, China. ISSP is a triennial conference with the aim of providing an interdisciplinary forum for researchers working on all aspects of speech production from fields as diverse as phonology, phonetics, prosody, mechanics, acoustics, physiology, motor control, neuroscience, computer science and human interaction. ISSP has been held over the word since 1988.
The ISSP-2017 will be hosted by Tianjin University and Institute of Linguistics of Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. Tianjin was the ancient port city to Beijing, and is the 3rd largest city of China with a population of over 15 million. It has a rich history and remains characteristics of old British and Italian architecture. The famous Italian concession area has the largest cluster of old Italian architecture outside of Italy. Located 85 miles east of Beijing, Tianjin is the largest coastal city in northern China. Tianjin is now a modern, developed city. Tianjin has a reputation throughout China for being extremely friendly, safe and a place of delicious food. Welcome to Tianjin.
The proceeding will be published by Springer and indexed by EI. Papers with high quality will be included in a special issue of ?Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research?/ ?Journal of Phonetics? after revision.
Topics of interest for submission include, but are not restricted to the following:
? Perception-action control ? Intra- and inter-speaker variability ? Articulatory synthesis ? Mapping between articulatory and acoustic events ? Acoustic-to-articulatory inversion ? Coarticulation ? Prosody ? Biomechanical modeling ? Models of motor control ? Audiovisual synthesis ? Aerodynamic models ? Cerebral organization and neural correlates of speech ? Disorders of speech motor control ? Instrumental techniques ? Speech and language acquisition ? Audio-visual speech perception ? Plasticity of speech production and perception
For more information about ISSP2017, please refer to the conference webpage: www.issp2017.org.cn
Important Dates:
2-page abstract submission deadline 1 March 2017
Notification of paper acceptance 1 May 2017
Full paper upload deadline 1 August 2017
Author?s registration deadline 1 September 2017
best
-- Qiang Fang Phonetics Lab. Institute of Linguistics, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences No.5, Jian Guo Men Nei Da Jie, Beijing, China
(2017-10-23) 5th INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON STATISTICAL LANGUAGE AND SPEECH PROCESSING, Le Mans, France
5th INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON STATISTICAL LANGUAGE AND SPEECH PROCESSING SLSP 2017 Le Mans, France October 23-25, 2017 Organized by: Computer Science Lab (LIUM) University of Le Mans Research Group on Mathematical Linguistics (GRLMC) Rovira i Virgili University http://grammars.grlmc.com/SLSP2017/ ********************************************************************************** AIMS: SLSP is a yearly conference series aimed at promoting and displaying excellent research on the wide spectrum of statistical methods that are currently in use in computational language or speech processing. It aims at attracting contributions from both fields. Though there exist large, well-known conferences and workshops hosting contributions to any of these areas, SLSP is a more focused meeting where synergies between subdomains and people will hopefully happen. In SLSP 2017, significant room will be reserved to young scholars at the beginning of their career and particular focus will be put on methodology. VENUE: SLSP 2017 will take place in Le Mans, in the region Pays de la Loire, a city with well-preserved Gallo-Roman remnants. The venue will be: Claude Chappe Informatics Institute University of Le Mans Avenue Laënnec 72085 Le Mans Cedex 9 SCOPE: The conference invites submissions discussing the employment of statistical models (including machine learning) within language and speech processing. Topics of either theoretical or applied interest include, but are not limited to: anaphora and coreference resolution authorship identification, plagiarism and spam filtering computer-aided translation corpora and language resources data mining and semantic web information extraction information retrieval knowledge representation and ontologies lexicons and dictionaries machine translation multimodal technologies natural language understanding neural representation of speech and language opinion mining and sentiment analysis parsing part-of-speech tagging question-answering systems semantic role labelling speaker identification and verification speech and language generation speech recognition speech synthesis speech transcription spelling correction spoken dialogue systems term extraction text categorisation text summarisation user modeling STRUCTURE: SLSP 2017 will consist of: invited talks peer-reviewed contributions posters INVITED SPEAKERS: tba PROGRAMME COMMITTEE: (to be completed) Robert Gaizauskas (University of Sheffield, UK) Keikichi Hirose (University of Tokyo, JP) Gareth Jones (Dublin City University, IE) Tomi Kinnunen (University of Eastern Finland, FI) Elizabeth D. Liddy (Syracuse University, US) Xunying Liu (Chinese University of Hong Kong, HK) Carlos Martín-Vide (Rovira i Virgili University, ES, chair) Yuji Matsumoto (Nara Institute of Science and Technology, JP) Marie-Francine Moens (KU Leuven, BE) Preslav Nakov (Qatar Computing Research Institute, QA) Hermann Ney (RWTH Aachen University, DE) Holger Schwenk (Facebook, FR) Phil Woodland (University of Cambridge, UK) ORGANIZING COMMITTEE: Walid Aransa (Le Mans) Adrien Bardet (Le Mans) Abdessalam Bouchekif (Le Mans) Fethi Bougares (Le Mans) Nathalie Camelin (Le Mans) Yannick Estève (Le Mans, co-chair) Mercedes García Martínez (Le Mans) Sahar Ghannay (Le Mans) Anthony Larcher (Le Mans) Antoine Laurent (Le Mans) Carlos Martín-Vide (Tarragona, co-chair) Salima Mdhaffar (Le Mans) Manuel J. Parra Royón (Granada) Simon Petitrenaud (Le Mans) David Silva (London) Natalia Tomashenko (Le Mans) Kévin Vythelingum (Le Mans) SUBMISSIONS: Authors are invited to submit non-anonymized papers in English presenting original and unpublished research. Papers should not exceed 12 single-spaced pages (including eventual appendices, references, proofs, graphics, etc.) and should be prepared according to the standard format for Springer Verlag's LNCS series (see http://www.springer.com/computer/lncs?SGWID=0-164-6-793341-0). Submissions have to be uploaded to: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=slsp2017 PUBLICATIONS: A volume of proceedings published by Springer in the LNCS/LNAI series will be available by the time of the conference. A special issue of a major journal will be later published containing peer-reviewed substantially extended versions of some of the papers contributed to the conference. Submissions to it will be by invitation. REGISTRATION: The registration form can be found at: http://grammars.grlmc.com/SLSP2017/Registration.php DEADLINES (all at 23:59 CET): Paper submission: June 11, 2017 Notification of paper acceptance or rejection: July 11, 2017 Final version of the paper for the LNCS/LNAI proceedings: July 21, 2017 Early registration: July 21, 2017 Late registration: October 9, 2017 Submission to the journal special issue: January 25, 2018 QUESTIONS AND FURTHER INFORMATION: david.silva409@yahoo.com POSTAL ADDRESS: SLSP 2017 Research Group on Mathematical Linguistics (GRLMC) Rovira i Virgili University Av. Catalunya, 35 43002 Tarragona, Spain ACKNOWLEDGMENTS: Université du Maine Universitat Rovira i Virgili
The Association for the Advancement of Affective Computing (AAAC) invites you to join us at our seventh International Conference on Affective Computing and Intelligent Interaction (ACII), which will be held in San Antonio, Texas on October 23-26, 2017. The Conference series is the premier international forum for interdisciplinary research on the design of systems that can recognize, interpret, and simulate human emotions and related affective phenomena.
A selection of the best articles will appear in a “Best of ACII2017” special section of IEEE’s Transactions on Affective Computing. Proceedings will be submitted for inclusion to IEEE Xplore. The theme of ACII2017 is “Affective Computing in Action,” highlighting the impact of affective computing technologies in the wider world.
Program
ACII2017 will feature a broad program, with regular talks, posters, demos, workshops, special sessions, a doctoral consortium, special industry panel session on affective computing applications and keynote talks by James Russell (Boston College), Tanzeem Choudhury (Cornell University) and Thomas R. Insel (former NIHM). We will have two special sessions: “Emotions in Cognition, Adaptive Behavior and Action Selection” and “Utilising Big Unlabelled and Unmatched Data for Affective Computing”.
Topics
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
Recognition of Human Affect: Uni- or multimodal recognition of affect from face, body, gesture, voice text, or physiology; affective face/body animation; expression and gesture recognition; sentiment analysis
Synthesis of Human Affect: Affective speech synthesis, modeling and animation, synthesis of auditory affect bursts, synthesis of multimodal affective behavior
Affective Interfaces: Affective brain-computer interfaces, design of affective loop and affective dialog systems; mobile, tangible, haptic and virtual/augmented interfaces; affectively-smart environments; affectively proactive interfaces
Social and Behavioral Science Involving Affective Computing: Cognitive affective models; models of moral decision-making; tools for social science research; computational models of emotion; psychological factors in affective computing (personality, culture); ethical issues; dyadic and group affective processes
Affective and Social Robotics and Virtual Agents: Emotions in robot cognition and action, embodied issues in emotion; affective virtual agents; memory, reasoning, and learning of affective systems; affective architectures for virtual & robotic systems
The 19th International Conference on Multimodal Interaction (ICMI 2017) will be held in Glasgow, Scotland. ICMI is the premier international forum for multidisciplinary research on multimodal human-human and human-computer interaction, interfaces, and system development. The conference focuses on theoretical and empirical foundations, component technologies, and combined multimodal processing techniques that define the field of multimodal interaction analysis, interface design, and system development.
This year, ICMI welcomes contributions on human-computer interaction as a particular topic of interest. We are keen to showcase novel input and output modalities and interactions to the ICMI community. ICMI 2017 will feature a single-track main conference which includes: keynote speakers, technical full and short papers (including oral and poster presentations), demonstrations, exhibits and doctoral spotlight papers. The conference will also feature workshops and grand challenges. The proceedings of ICMI'2017 will be published by ACM as part of their series of International Conference Proceedings and Digital Library.
Topics of interest include but are not limited to:
Affective Computing and interaction
Cognitive modeling and multimodal interaction
Gesture, touch and haptics
Healthcare, assistive technologies
Human communication dynamics
Human-robot/agent multimodal interaction
Interaction with smart environment
Machine learning for multimodal interaction
Mobile multimodal systems
Multimodal behavior generation
Multimodal datasets and validation
Multimodal dialogue modeling
Multimodal fusion and representation
Multimodal interactive applications
Speech behaviors in social interaction
System components and multimodal platforms
Visual behaviors in social interaction
Virtual/augmented reality and multimodal interaction
Submission Process
There are two different submission categories:
Long paper :The maximum length is 8 pages in the two-column ACM conference format (excluding references). An accompanying demonstration can be presented during the demo session (see Demonstration section). Accepted long papers will be presented as either a long talk or a poster.
Short paper :The maximum length is 4 pages in the two-column ACM conference format (excluding references). Accepted short papers will be presented as either a short talk or a poster.
There will be a mixture of oral and poster presentations at the conference. The decision of a poster or an oral presentation will be made by the program committee. Please note that the main difference between short and long papers is in the size of contributions and not in the importance of the contributions. In other words, a paper in eight pages will be expected to have more contribution than one with four pages. Rejected long papers will not be considered for acceptance as short papers, unless the reviewers unanimously believe this is the right decision. Authors are asked to carefully consider the category of each submitted paper.
Rebuttal Period
During this period (from July 21st to July 25th, 2017), authors will be able to see the reviews and post a short rebuttal addressing any major misinterpretation or error. The rebuttal period will be followed by a discussion period between the reviewers and Senior Program Committee members (not visible to authors). Authors will be notified of the final decision on August 25th, 2017.
The 2017 International Conference on Multimodal Interaction, ICMI 2017, which will be held in Glasgow, Scotland between 13th and 17th November 2017. ICMI is the premier international forum for multidisciplinary research on multimodal human-human and human-computer interaction, interfaces, and system development. The conference focuses on theoretical and empirical foundations, component technologies, and combined multimodal processing techniques that define the field of multimodal interaction analysis, interface design, and system development. ICMI 2017 will feature a single-track main conference which includes: keynote speakers, grand challenges (due Jan 13th), workshops (due Feb 22nd), technical full and short papers (including oral and poster presentations, due May 12th), exhibits and doctoral consortium papers (due July 3rd) and demonstrations (due August 11th). The proceedings of ICMI'2017 will be published by ACM as part of their series of International Conference Proceedings and Digital Library.
(2017-11-23) Journée scientifique:Développement de l'articulation : du développement typique à la dyspraxie verbale, Grenoble, France
Appel à communication
Journée Scientifique
Développement de l?articulation : du développement typique à la dyspraxie verbale 23 novembre 2017, Grenoble
Le CRTLA-CHU Grenoble Alpes, le laboratoire LPNC, le laboratoire GIPSA-lab, et l?Association Coridys-Isère organisent 3 événements autour du développement de l?articulation de parole typique et pathologique, à destination des personnels de santé (orthophonistes, médecins, psychologues, etc.), des chercheurs et des étudiants :
Le mercredi 22 novembre 2017: un atelier sur le logiciel PHON, animé par Yvan Rose
Le jeudi 23 novembre 2017 : une journée scientifique sur les nouvelles approches théoriques, les nouveaux outils technologiques d?aide à l?identification, l?évaluation et l?intervention, ainsi que des études cliniques, avec les conférences plénières de Andrea McLeod (U. Montréal, Canada), Christelle Maillart (U. Liège, Belgique), Line Charron (U. Laval, Canada), Yvan Rose (U. Memorial Terre-Neuve, Canada)
Les 24 et 25 novembre 2017 : un ateliersur la dyspraxie verbale, animé par Line Charron (à destination du public orthophoniste)
Au cours de la journée scientifique du 23 novembre, est prévue une session posters, permettant de présenter les études récentes sur le développement typique et atypique de l'articulation chez l?enfant.
Les participants à cette journée sont invités à soumettre leur proposition de poster, sous forme d'un résumé de 500 mots, à envoyer à DyspraxieVerbale2017@chu-grenoble.fr .
La date limite de soumission est fixée au 15 juin 2017.
(2017-12-01) The 8th International Joint Conference on Natural Language Processing (IJCNLP 2017), Taipei, Taiwan
Call for Papers: The 8th International Joint Conference on Natural Language Processing (IJCNLP 2017), Taipei, Taiwan, November 27 °V December 1, 2017 (http://ijcnlp2017.org/)
The 8th International Joint Conference on Natural Language Processing (IJCNLP 2017) invites the submission of long and short papers reporting substantial, original, and unpublished research in all aspects of automated language processing. Relevant topics for the conference include, but are not limited to the following areas:
* Cognitive modeling and psycholinguistics * Dialog and interactive systems * Discourse and pragmatics * Document analysis including text categorization, topic models, and retrieval * Generation * Information extraction, text mining, and question answering * Machine learning in NLP * Machine translation and Multilinguality * Phonology, morphology, and word segmentation * Resources and evaluation * Semantics * Sentiment analysis and opinion mining * Social media * Speech * Summarization * Tagging, chunking, syntax, and parsing
Important Dates
Deadline Submission deadline for long and short papers: July 7, 2017 Author response period: August 7 - 9, 2017 Notification of acceptance: September 1, 2017 Camera ready due: September 30, 2017
** All deadlines are calculated at 11:59pm Pacific Daylight Savings Time (UTC-7).
Events Workshops, tutorials and shared tasks: November 27, 2017 and December 1, 2017 Main conference: November 28 - 30, 2017
Submission Information Paper submission for IJCNLP will be handled by the Softconf START system. The submission deadline is July 7, 2017.
Long Papers IJCNLP 2017 long paper submissions must describe substantial, original, completed and unpublished work. Wherever appropriate, concrete evaluation and analysis should be included. Each long paper submission consists of a paper of up to eight (8) pages of content, plus two pages for references; final versions of long papers will be given one additional page (up to nine pages with unlimited pages for references) so that reviewers°¶ comments can be taken into account.
Short Papers IJCNLP 2017 also solicits short papers. Short paper submissions must describe original and unpublished work. A short paper is not a shortened long paper and should have a point that can be made in a few pages. For example: * A small, focused contribution * Work in progress * A negative result * An opinion piece * An interesting application nugget
Each short paper submission consists of up to four (4) pages of content, plus 2 pages for references; final versions of short papers will be given one additional page (up to five pages in the proceedings and unlimited pages for references) so that reviewers°¶ comments can be taken into account.
Submission Format Submissions must be in PDF, and must conform to the official style guidelines in two-column format for IJCNLP 2017. We ask you to use the provided LaTeX style files (they will be posted on the conference site). Authors are strongly discouraged from modifying the style files. Please do not use other templates (e.g., Word). Submissions that do not conform to the required styles, including paper size, margin width, and font size restrictions, will be rejected without review.
As the reviewing will be blind, papers should not include the authors' names and affiliations. Furthermore, self-references that reveal the author's identity, e.g., °ßWe previously showed (Smith, 1991) ...°®, should be avoided. Instead, use citations such as °ßSmith (1991) previously showed ...°®. Acknowledgments of funding or assistance should be omitted. Submissions that do not conform to these requirements will be rejected without review. Separate author identification information is required as part of the online submission process. IJCNLP 2017 encourages the submission of supplementary material such as software and data mentioned in the paper. The supplementary material should be supplementary (rather than central) to the paper. It may include explanations or details of proofs or derivations that do not fit into the paper, lists of features or feature templates, sample inputs and outputs for a system, pseudo-code or source code, and data. It may also include reports on preprocessing decisions, model parameters, and other details necessary for the exact replication of the experiments described in the paper. The paper should be self-contained and not rely on the supplementary material. Reviewers are not asked to review or even download the supplemental material. If the pseudo-code or derivations or model specifications are an important part of the contribution, or if they are important for the reviewers to assess the technical correctness of the work, they should be a part of the main paper, not as appendices. Multiple Submission Policy Papers that have been or will be submitted to other meetings or publications must indicate this at submission time, and must be withdrawn from the other venues if accepted by IJCNLP 2017. We will not accept for publication or presentation papers that overlap significantly in content or results with papers that will be (or have been) published elsewhere. Authors submitting more than one paper to IJCNLP 2017 must ensure that submissions do not overlap significantly (>25%) with each other in content or results.
Preprint servers such as arXiv.org and workshops that do not have published proceedings are not considered archival for purposes of submission. To preserve the spirit of blind review, authors are encouraged to refrain from posting until the completion of the review process. Otherwise, authors must state in the online submission form the name of the workshop or preprint server and title of the non-archival version. The submitted version should be suitably anonymized and not contain references to the prior non-archival version. Reviewers will be told: 'The author(s) have notified us that there exists a non-archival previous version of this paper with significantly overlapping text. We have approved submission under these circumstances, but to preserve the spirit of blind review, the current submission does not reference the non-archival version.' Presentation Requirement All accepted papers must be presented at the conference to appear in the proceedings. At least one author of each accepted paper must register for IJCNLP 2017. Accepted papers will be presented orally or as a poster (at the discretion of the program chairs based on the nature rather than the quality of the work). There will be no distinction in the proceedings between papers presented orally or as posters.
The DSTC shared task has now been running since 2013. This year?s challenge has been renamed to Dialog System Technology Challenge, which reflects the wider scope we aim for. The DSTC6 workshop will be co-located to one of conferences such as NIPS or IWSDS.
The challenge will include 3-4 tracks, which should reflect the interests of the community. We will ask the community to cast expressions of interest via an online voting system in order to ensure sufficient numbers of participants per track.
Submissions
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We would like to encourage you to submit a 2-page proposal (+ unlimited references, + an appendix of unlimited size containing examples of the data, annotations, and expected output to be generated), including but not limited to:
- end-to-end systems
- dialogue state tracking
- spoken language understanding
- natural language generation for SDS
- dialogue breakdown detection
- automatic evaluation metrics
- question-answering
- text to API call
Your proposal should contain:
1) The names and affiliations of the organisers;
2) A description of the task, with particular reference to its relevance for the dialog community;
3) A description of the data that will be provided for participants;
4) A description of the evaluation methods that will be used to compare peer systems;
5) An appendix of unlimited size containing examples of the data, annotations, and expected output to be generated
(2017-12-16)CfP IEEE Automatic Speech Recognition and Understanding Workshop, Okinawa, Japan
ASRU 2017 IEEE Automatic Speech Recognition and Understanding Workshop December 16-20, 2017 Okinawa, Japan http://asru2017.org CALL FOR PAPERS The biennial IEEE ASRU workshop has a tradition of bringing together researchers from academia and industry in an intimate and collegial setting to discuss problems of common interest in automatic speech recognition, understanding, and related fields of research. The workshop includes keynotes, invited talks, poster sessions and will also feature challenge tasks, panel discussions, and demo sessions. TOPICS AND FOCUS We invite papers in all areas of spoken language processing, with emphasis placed on the following topics: - Automatic speech recognition (ASR) - ASR in adverse environments - New applications of ASR - Speech-to-speech translation - Spoken document retrieval - Multilingual language processing - Spoken language understanding - Spoken dialog systems - Text-to-speech systems VENUE The ASRU workshop will take place in Okinawa, Japan. Okinawa is a subtropical island located roughly 640 kilometers (400 mi) south of the main islands of Japan. It is one of Japanfs main tourist destinations because of its warm weather, its rich natural resources, and its unique blend of cultures that evolved through centuries of trade with China, Korea and other Southeast Asian countries. FORMAT The workshop features one keynote and one or two invited talks a day. Regular papers are presented as posters. ASRU 2017 will also include challenge tasks, panel discussions and demo sessions. SCHEDULE Paper Submission............. June 29, 2017 Paper Notification........... August 31, 2017 Early Registration Period:... August 31 - Oct 5, 2017 Camera Ready Deadline........ Sept 21, 2017 Workshop..................... Dec 16-20, 2017 MORE INFORMATION For updates see http://www.asru2017.org
(2018-05-07) LREC 2018, 11th Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation - Phoenix Seagaia Resort, Miyazaki, Japan
LREC 2018, 11th Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation - Phoenix Seagaia Resort, Miyazaki, Japan 7-12 May 2018 Main Conference: 9-10-11 May 2018 Workshops and Tutorials: 7-8 & 12 May 2018
The European Language Resource Association (ELRA) is glad to announce the 11th edition of LREC, organised with the support of international organisations ? many from Asia: the Asian Federation of Natural Language Processing (AFNLP), Oriental COCOSDA, the Association of Natural Language Processing - Japan, the Chinese Information Processing Society of China, the Linguistic Data Consortium, ...
CONFERENCE AIMS LREC is the major event on Language Resources (LRs) and Evaluation for Human Language Technologies (HLT). LREC aims to provide an overview of the state-of-the-art, explore new R&D directions and emerging trends, exchange information regarding LRs and their applications, evaluation methodologies and tools, communicate on-going and planned activities, identify industrial uses and needs, and address requirements from e-science and e-society, with respect to scientific, technology, policy and organisational issues.
For this edition, LREC goes East in order to support a stronger interaction and synergy with the Asian NLP community and to help promoting Asian Language Resources and Language Technologies.
LREC provides a unique forum for researchers, industrials and funding agencies from a wide spectrum of related disciplines to discuss issues and opportunities, find new synergies and promote initiatives for international cooperation, in support of investigations in language sciences, progress in language technologies (LTs) and development of corresponding products, services and applications, and standards.
CONFERENCE TOPICS Issues in the design, construction and use of LRs: text, speech, sign, gesture, image, in single or multimodal/multimedia data * Guidelines, standards, best practices and models for LRs interoperability * Methodologies and tools for LRs construction and annotation * Methodologies and tools for extraction and acquisition of knowledge * Ontologies, terminology and knowledge representation * LRs and Semantic Web * LRs and Crowdsourcing * Metadata for LRs and semantic/content mark-up
Exploitation of LRs in systems and applications * Sign language, multimedia information and multimodal communication * LRs in systems and applications such as: information extraction, information retrieval, audio-visual and multimedia search, speech dictation, meeting transcription, Computer Aided Language Learning, training and education, mobile communication, machine translation, speech translation, summarisation, web services, semantic search, text mining, inferencing, reasoning, sentiment analysis/opinion mining, etc. * Interfaces: (speech-based) dialogue systems, natural language and multimodal/multisensory interactions, voice-activated services, etc. * Use of (multilingual) LRs in various fields of application like e-government, e-participation, e-culture, e-health, mobile applications, digital humanities, social sciences, etc. * Industrial LRs requirements * User needs, LT for accessibility Issues in LT evaluation * LT evaluation methodologies, protocols and measures * Validation and quality assurance of LRs * Benchmarking of systems and products * Usability evaluation of HLT-based user interfaces and dialogue systems * User satisfaction evaluation General issues regarding LRs & Evaluation * International and national activities, projects and initiatives * Priorities, perspectives, strategies in national and international policies for LRs * Multilingual issues, language coverage and diversity, less-resourced languages * Open, linked and shared data and tools, open and collaborative architectures * Replicability and reproducibility issues * Organisational, economical, ethical and legal issues
LREC 2018 HOT TOPICS
Asian Language Resources Special attention will be devoted to highlight the wide variety of initiatives for the creation, use and evaluation of Asian Language Resources and Technologies. Special attention will be paid to Less-Resourced Languages in the Asian area, including (local) Sign Languages.
International Contribution to Olympics 2020 LREC 2018 would like to promote all LTs that would support better interactions and communications between the Olympics 2020 visitors and the local hosts. This involves all speech- and text-based computer interactions, speech/sign to speech/sign translations, human-human communications mediated by computers, etc. Assessment of the above mentioned technologies is also an important area within LREC 2018.
Language Resources in the Online World In a time in which more and more (language) data are generated, either by human beings or by machines, and directly streamed, the question arises how LRs and LTs can cope with this development. A first challenge is to address and to provide for correctives to hate speeches, cyberbullying, fake news, etc. Can LT provide means to process and respond in a timely manner to such language data streamed in a huge amount at high speed? In this context, language technologists have to intensify cooperation with humanities, especially social and political sciences, psychology but also economics, and more.
DESCRIBE AND SHARE YOUR LRs! In addition to describing your LRs in the LRE Map ? now a normal step in the submission procedure of many conferences ? LREC recognises the importance of sharing resources and making them available to the community. When submitting a paper, you will be offered the possibility to share your LRs (data, tools, web-services, etc.), uploading them in a special LREC repository set up by ELRA. Your LRs will be made available to all LREC participants before the conference, to be re-used, compared, analysed. This effort of sharing LRs, linked to the LRE Map for their description, contributes to creating a common repository where everyone can deposit and share data. PROGRAMME The Scientific Programme will include invited talks, oral presentations, poster and demo presentations, and panels, in addition to a keynote address by the winner of the Antonio Zampolli Prize. We will also organise an Industrial Track.
SUBMISSIONS AND DATES Submission of proposals for oral and poster (or poster+demo) papers: September 25, 2017 * LREC2018 asks for extended abstracts of no less than 3000 words (references excluded), which must strictly follow the LREC stylesheet which will be available on the conference website. Extended abstracts should be submitted through START and will be peer-reviewed. Submission of proposals for panels, workshops and tutorials: September 25, 2017 * Proposals should be submitted via an online form on the LREC website and will be reviewed by the Programme Committee. PROCEEDINGS The Proceedings will include both oral and poster papers, in the same format. Final papers will range from 4 to 8 pages, with no difference in quality between shorter and longer submissions. There is also no difference in quality between oral and poster presentations. Only the appropriateness of the type of communication (more or less interactive) to the content of the paper will be considered. The importance of LREC in Natural Language Processing is reflected by the H5-Index citation ranking in Google Scholar: LREC is ranked 3rd among Computational Linguistics conferences. In addition, since 2010, LREC Proceedings are included in the Thomson Reuters Conference Proceedings Citation Index.
CONFERENCE PROGRAMME COMMITTEE Nicoletta Calzolari ? CNR, Istituto di Linguistica Computazionale ?Antonio Zampolli?, Pisa - Italy (Conference chair) Khalid Choukri ? ELRA, Paris - France Christopher Cieri ? Linguistic Data Consortium, Philadelphia - USA Thierry Declerck ? DFKI GmbH, Saarbrücken - Germany Koiti Hasida ? The University of Tokyo, Tokyo - Japan Hitoshi Isahara ? Toyohashi University of Technology, Toyohashi - Japan Bente Maegaard ? Centre for Language Technology, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen - Denmark Joseph Mariani ? LIMSI-CNRS, Orsay - France Asuncion Moreno ? Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Barcelona - Spain Jan Odijk ? UIL-OTS, Utrecht - The Netherlands Stelios Piperidis ? Athena Research Center/ILSP, Athens - Greece Takenobu Tokunaga ? Tokyo Institute of Technology, Tokyo ? Japan
CONFERENCE EDITORIAL COMMITTEE Sara Goggi, CNR, Istituto di Linguistica Computazionale ?Antonio Zampolli?, Pisa, Italy Hélène Mazo, ELDA/ELRA, Paris, France