3-3-1 | (2022-10-12) French Cross-Domain Dialect Identification (FDI) task @VarDial2022, Gyeongju, South Korea
We are organizing the French Cross-Domain Dialect Identification (FDI) task @VarDial2022.
In the 2022 French Dialect Identification (FDI) shared task, participants have to train a model on news samples collected from a set of publication sources and evaluate it on news samples collected from a different set of publication sources. Not only the sources are different, but also the topics. Therefore, participants have to build a model for a cross-domain 4-way classification by dialect task, in which a classification model is required to discriminate between the French (FH), Swiss (CH), Belgian (BE) and Canadian (CA) dialects across different news samples. The corpus is divided into training, validation and test, such that the publication sources and topics are distinct across splits. The training set contains 358,787 samples. The development set is composed of 18,002 samples. Another set of 36,733 samples are kept for the final evaluation.
We invite you to participate!
Have a nice day.
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3-3-2 | (2022-10-17) Cf Posters papers, ISMAR 2022, Singapore
CALL FOR POSTER PAPERS https://ismar2022.org/call-for-posters/
OVERVIEW ISMAR 2022, the premier conference for Augmented Reality (AR) and Mixed Reality (MR), will be held on October 17-21, 2022. Note that ISMAR offers three distinct calls for journals, papers, and posters. This call is for submission to the conference poster track. See the ISMAR website for more information.
IMPORTANT DEADLINES Poster Paper Submission Deadline: June 20th, 2022 Notification: August 15th, 2022 Camera-ready version: August 22nd, 2022 ISMAR is responding to the increasing commercial and research activities related to AR and MR and Virtual Reality (VR) by continuing the expansion of its scope over the past several years. ISMAR 2022 will cover the full range of technologies encompassed by the MR continuum, from interfaces in the real world to fully immersive experiences.
ISMAR invites research contributions that advance AR/VR/MR technologies, collectively referred to as eXtended Reality (XR) technologies, and are relevant to the community.
The poster session is one of the highlights of ISMAR, where the community engages in a discussion about the benefits and challenges of XR in other research and application domains.
SUBMISSION DETAILS We welcome paper submissions from 2-6 pages, including the list of references. Poster papers will be reviewed on the basis of an extended abstract, which can contain smaller contributions, late breaking developments or in-progress work.
Please note that ISMAR further distinguishes poster papers of 2 pages to be non-archival and poster papers of 3 or more pages to be archival. This means that authors of 2 page poster papers can resubmit longer versions of their accepted work, with additional details, at later ISMAR conferences.
All submissions will be accepted or rejected as poster papers. All accepted papers will be archived in the IEEE Xplore digital library At least one of the authors must register and attend the ISMAR 2022 conference to present the poster The Poster track is co-aligned to the Conference Paper track, which may accept some Conference Paper submissions as posters based on the merit of their contribution. Detailed submission and review guidelines are available on the conference website and the Guidelines section.
Note that All paper submissions must be in English.
ISMAR 2022 Poster Chairs poster_chairs@ismar2022.org
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3-3-3 | (2022-10-19) CfP GDR CNRS « l’accès à l’information » , Rennes, France
Dans le cadre du GdR CNRS Traitement automatique des langues (GdR TAL), l’IRISA organise une journée scientifique sur le thème de « l’accès à l’information » le 19 octobre 2022 à Rennes. La journée sera organisée autour de plusieurs présentations orales invitées et de présentations posters et de démos (cf. appel ci-dessous).
Thèmes
La numérisation de la société a censément facilité l’accès aux informations, que ce soit pour le grand public (savoir encyclopédique, actualités…) ou dans des domaines de spécialité (p. ex. littérature scientifique).
Cependant, face à l’avalanche de documents, de sites web, de sources, etc., de nombreuses questions pratiques émergent, qui sont autant de défis scientifiques pour les domaines de la recherche d’information, du traitement de la langue et de la parole :
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Comment trouver les documents ou passages permettant de répondre à un besoin spécifique d’informations ?
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Comment extraire des informations spécifiques d’un ensemble de documents, des termes, des entités nommées ?
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Comment faciliter l’interaction entre un utilisateur et une collection de documents, naviguer en son sein, développer des interfaces de visualisation ?
- Comment résumer l'information ?
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Comment exploiter efficacement la multimodalité, traiter des documents multilingues ou multimédias ?
- Comment interfacer bases de connaissances et systèmes de TAL ?
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Comment s’assurer de la fiabilité des sources et des informations extraites, comment caractériser leurs biais ?
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...
Appel à poster et démos
Dans le cadre de cette journée, nous invitons les chercheuses et chercheurs, travaillant sur ces thèmes dans un cadre académique ou industriel à présenter (démo ou poster) leurs travaux, même déjà publiés, pour échanger avec des collègues du domaine. Pour cela, il suffit de soumettre un résumé d’une page maximum, et/ou le poster s’il est déjà existant, et/ou l’article décrivant les travaux si déjà publié, en français ou en anglais, https://gdr-tal-rennes.sciencesconf.org .
Soumission des résumés/posters/articles : au fil de l’eau et au plus tard 30 septembre 2022
Notification aux auteurs : 1 semaine après réception de la proposition
Orateurs invités
Il y aura 4 présentations invitées :
- Du traitement automatique du langage naturel et de l'accès aux données expérimentales - Patrick Paroubek (CNRS, LISN)
- Extraction d’information et gestion de la connaissance au sein d’une organisation. Comment mener des travaux de Recherche ouverte sur des données « fermées » ? - Géraldine Damnati (Orange Labs)
- Visual Text Analytics in Data Journalism - Anastasia Bezerianos (Univ. Paris Saclay, LISN)
- Flagging suspect scientific publications for post-publication reassessments - Cyril Labbé (Univ. Grenoble, LIG)
Inscription (gratuite mais obligatoire) et venue
La journée se tiendra dans le centre de conférence à l’IRISA - Centre Inria de l'université de Rennes, Campus de Beaulieu, Rennes.
Inscription (gratuite mais obligatoire), programme et informations : https://gdr-tal-rennes.sciencesconf.org
Rappel : Le GDR TAL peut financer une mission pour un chercheur ou enseignant chercheur par équipe du GDR. La demande est à effectuer par le responsable de l’équipe au bureau du GDR. La liste des équipes éligibles est sur le site du GDR TAL ; cf. https://gdr-tal.ls2n.fr/reseau-des-doctorants/
De plus, pour les jeunes chercheuses et chercheurs venant présenter leurs travaux, des aides pour venir à cette journée peuvent également être sollicitées auprès des organisateurs. Contactez vincent.claveau@irisa.fr
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3-3-4 | (2022-11-07) 24th ACM International Conference on Multimodal Interaction (ICMI 2022), Bengaluru (Bangalore), India
CALL FOR LATE-BREAKING RESULTS
We invite you to submit your papers to the late-breaking results track of the 24th ACM International Conference on Multimodal Interaction (ICMI 2022), located in Bengaluru (Bangalore), India, November 7-11th, 2022.
Based on the success of the LBR in the past ICMI 18-21, the ACM International Conference on Multimodal Interaction (ICMI) 2022 continues soliciting submissions for the special venue titled Late-Breaking Results (LBR). The goal of the LBR venue is to provide a way for researchers to share emerging results at the conference. Accepted submissions will be presented in a poster session at the conference, and the extended abstract will be published in the new Adjunct Proceedings (Companion Volume) of the main ICMI Proceedings. Like similar venues at other conferences, the LBR venue is intended to allow sharing of ideas, getting formative feedback on early-stage work, and furthering collaborations among colleagues.
- Highlights
- Submission deadline: August 12th, 2022
- Notifications: September 9th, 2022
- Camera-ready deadline: September 16th, 2022
- Conference Dates: November 7-11, 2022
- Submission format: Anonymized, short paper (seven-page paper in a single column format, not including references),
- following the submission guidelines.
- Selection process: Peer-Reviewed
- Presentation format: Participation in the conference poster session
- Proceedings: Included in Adjunct Proceedings and ACM Digital Library
- LBR Co-chairs: Fabien Ringeval and Nikita Soni
Late-Breaking Work (LBR) submissions represent work such as preliminary results, provoking and current topics, novel experiences or interactions that may not have been fully validated yet, cutting-edge or emerging work that is still in exploratory stages, smaller-scale studies, or in general, work that has not yet reached a level of maturity expected for the full-length main track papers. However, LBR papers are still expected to bring a contribution to the ICMI community, commensurate with the preliminary, short, and quasi-informal nature of this track.
Accepted LBR papers will be presented as posters during the conference. This provides an opportunity for researchers to receive feedback on early-stage work, explore potential collaborations, and otherwise engage in exciting thought-provoking discussions about their work in an informal setting that is significantly less constrained than a paper presentation. The LBR (posters) track also offers those new to the ICMI community a chance to share their preliminary research as they become familiar with this field.
Late-Breaking Results papers appear in the Adjunct Proceedings (Companion Volume) of the ICMI Proceedings. Copyright is retained by the authors, and the material from these papers can be used as the basis for future publications as long as there are “significant” revisions from the original, as per the ACM and ACM SIGCHI policies.
Extended Abstract: An anonymized short paper, seven-page paper in a single column format, not including references. The instructions and templates are on the following link: https://www.acm.org/publications/taps/word-template-workflow. The paper should be submitted in PDF format and through the ICMI submission system in the “Late-Breaking Results” track. Due to the tight publication timeline, it is recommended that authors submit a very nearly finalized paper that is as close to camera-ready as possible, as there will be a very short timeframe for preparing the final camera-ready version and no deadline extensions can be granted.
Anonymization: Authors are instructed not to include author information in their submission. In order to help reviewers judge the situation of the LBR to prior work, authors should not remove or anonymize references to their own prior work. Instead, we recommend that authors obscure references to their own prior work by referring to it in the third person during submission. If desired, after acceptance, such references can be changed to first-person.
LBRs will be evaluated to the extent that they are presenting work still in progress, rather than complete work which is under-described in order to fit into the LBR format. The LBR track will undergo an external peer review process. Submissions will be evaluated by a number of factors including (1) the relevance of the work to ICMI, (2) the quality of the submission, and (3) the degree to which it “fits” the LBR track (e.g., in-progress results). More particularly, the quality of the submission will be evaluated based on the potential contributions of the research to the field of multimodal interfaces and its impact on the field and beyond. Authors should clearly justify how the proposed ideas can bring some measurable breakthroughs compared to the state-of-the-art of the field.
Similar rules for registration and attendance will be applied for authors of LBR papers as for regular papers. Further information will be available later on and given on the main page of the website.
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3-3-5 | (2022-11-07) Doctoral Consortium at ICMI- Call for Contributions
Doctoral Consortium - Call for Contributions
The goal of the ICMI Doctoral Consortium (DC) is to provide PhD students with an opportunity to present their work to a group of mentors and peers from a diverse set of academic and industrial institutions, to receive feedback on their doctoral research plan and progress, and to build a cohort of young researchers interested in designing and developing multimodal interfaces and interaction. We invite students from all PhD granting institutions who are in the process of forming or carrying out a plan for their PhD research in the area of designing and developing multimodal interfaces.
Who should apply?
While we encourage applications from students at any stage of doctoral training, the doctoral consortium will benefit most the students who are in the process of forming or developing their doctoral research. These students will have passed their qualifiers or have completed the majority of their coursework, will be planning or developing their dissertation research, and will not be very close to completing their dissertation research. Students from any PhD granting institution whose research falls within designing and developing multimodal interfaces and interaction are encouraged to apply.
Why should you attend?
The DC provides an opportunity to build a social network that includes the cohort of DC students, senior students, recent graduates, and senior mentors. Not only is this an opportunity to get feedback on research directions, it is also an opportunity to learn more about the process and to understand what comes next. We aim to connect you with a mentor who will give specific feedback on your research. We specifically aim to create an informal setting where students feel supported in their professional development.
Submission Guidelines
Graduate students pursuing a PhD degree in a field related to designing multimodal interfaces should submit the following materials:
- Extended Abstract: Please describe your PhD research plan and progress as a seven-page paper in a single column format. The instructions and templates are on the following link: https://www.acm.org/publications/taps/word-template-workflow. Your extended abstract should follow the same outline, details, and format of the ICMI short papers. The submissions will not be anonymous. In particular, it should cover:
- The key research questions and motivation of your research;
- Background and related work that informs your research;
- A statement of hypotheses or a description of the scope of the technical problem;
- Your research plan, outlining stages of system development or series of studies;
- The research approach and methodology;
- Your results to date (if any) and a description of remaining work;
- A statement of research contributions to date (if any) and expected contributions of your PhD work;
- Advisor Letter: A one-page letter of nomination from the student's PhD advisor. This letter is not a letter of support. Instead, it should focus on the student's PhD plan and how the Doctoral Consortium event might contribute to the student's PhD training and research.
- CV: A two-page curriculum vitae of the student.
All materials should be prepared in a single PDF format and submitted through the ICMI submission system.
Important Dates
Submission deadline
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July 1, 2022
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Notifications
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July 29, 2022
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Camera-ready
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August 12, 2022
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The Doctoral Consortium will follow a review process in which submissions will be evaluated by a number of factors including (1) the quality of the submission, (2) the expected benefits of the consortium for the student's PhD research, and (3) the student's contribution to the diversity of topics, backgrounds, and institutions, in order of importance. More particularly, the quality of the submission will be evaluated based on the potential contributions of the research to the field of multimodal interfaces and its impact on the field and beyond. Finally, we hope to achieve a diversity of research topics, disciplinary backgrounds, methodological approaches, and home institutions in this year's Doctoral Consortium cohort. We do not expect more than two students to be invited from each institution to represent a diverse sample. Women and other underrepresented groups are especially encouraged to apply.
Attendance
All authors of accepted submissions are expected to attend the Doctoral Consortium and the main conference poster session. The attendees will present their work as a short talk or as a poster at the conference poster session. A detailed program for the Consortium and the participation guidelines will be available after the camera-ready deadline.
Process
For more information and updates on the ICMI 2022 Doctoral Consortium, visit the Doctoral Consortium page of the main conference website (https://icmi.acm.org/2022/doctoral-consortium/)
For further questions, contact the Doctoral Consortium co-chairs:
- Theodora Chaspari (chaspari@tamu.edu)
- Tanaya Guha (tanaya.guha@glasgow.ac.uk)
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3-3-6 | (2022-11-07) International Workshop on “Voice Assistant Systems in Team Interactions ‒ Implications, Best Practice, Applications, and Future Perspectives” VASTI 2022 @ICMI 2022
International Workshop on “Voice Assistant Systems in Team Interactions ‒ Implications, Best Practice, Applications, and Future Perspectives” VASTI 2022
co-located with the ICMI 2022
https://vasti2022.mobileds.de/
Scope The workshop is encouraging an interdisciplinary exchange of researchers focussing on multimodal interactions in the wide range of group research aspects, linguistic and acoustic perspectives, as well as dialogue management in relation to speech based systems, e.g. voice assistants. Regarding the mentioned research communities, the interdisciplinary collaboration between these research communities is currently rather loose. Therefore, the workshop aims on bridging the three research communities based on shared interests and provides a platform for detailed discussions.
Generally, human beings are usually interactive and socially engaged, often communicating in either dyads or groups. During such interactions, each communication partner (human or technical) is providing a variety of information, including general information/content, as well as personal and relational information. These communication aspects are in the focus of group interactions or multi-party interactions. In social sciences, areas such as investigating interpersonal relationships of the group members and the dynamics of group interaction, cohesion, and performance, are observed. These aspects are nowadays also considered in computer sciences and linguistics using automatic analyses. Unfortunately, these communities have started to collaborate only recently. In this sense, the workshop aims to strengthen these collaborations.
However, especially the advent of voice assistants and the increased distributions provide an optimal testbed to combine the three communities and encourage interdisciplinary discussions highlighting contributions from each research perspective. Especially, since at a certain level of development, current voice assistance systems seem to set the expectation of human-like linguistic flexibility and complexity, which is disproportionate to the actual skills of the artificial agent. To enable future technical systems to act as a conversational partner and act naturally in group or dyadic multimodal interactions, it is necessary to combine knowledge and research approaches on the fundamental mechanisms of human speech perception and speech production from a cognitive, psycholinguistic point of view as well as insights from interactional linguistics, discourse analysis and sociolinguistics with phonetics, phonology and prosody in the context of spoken interaction with machines. This should be further combined with aspects of dialogue management and social signal processing to allow a holistic consideration of the users and using groups.
Topics
Important dates: Submission deadline: July 28, 2022 Notification of Acceptance: August 12, 2022 Camera ready: August 19, 2022 Workshop date: November 7, 2022
Submissions Prospective authors are invited to submit full papers (8 pages, 7+1 reference) and short papers (5 pages, 4+1 reference) following the ICMI 2022 Latex or Word templates, as specified by ICMI 2021. All submissions should be anonymous. Accepted papers will be published in the conference proceedings.
Venue in conjunction with ICMI 2022 (intended to be onsite)
Organizers Ronald Böck, University Magdeburg, Germany Daniel Duran, Leibniz Zentrum für Angewandte Sprachwissenschaft, Germany Ingo Siegert, University Magdeburg, Germany
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3-3-7 | (2022-11-07) Late-breaking results @24th ACM International Conference on Multimodal Interaction (ICMI 2022), Bengaluru, India
CALL FOR LATE-BREAKING RESULTS
We invite you to submit your papers to the late-breaking results track of the 24th ACM International Conference on Multimodal Interaction (ICMI 2022), located in Bengaluru (Bangalore), India, November 7-11th, 2022.
Based on the success of the LBR in the past ICMI 18-21, the ACM International Conference on Multimodal Interaction (ICMI) 2022 continues soliciting submissions for the special venue titled Late-Breaking Results (LBR). The goal of the LBR venue is to provide a way for researchers to share emerging results at the conference. Accepted submissions will be presented in a poster session at the conference, and the extended abstract will be published in the new Adjunct Proceedings (Companion Volume) of the main ICMI Proceedings. Like similar venues at other conferences, the LBR venue is intended to allow sharing of ideas, getting formative feedback on early-stage work, and furthering collaborations among colleagues.
- Highlights
- Submission deadline: August 12th, 2022
- Notifications: September 9th, 2022
- Camera-ready deadline: September 16th, 2022
- Conference Dates: November 7-11, 2022
- Submission format: Anonymized, short paper (seven-page paper in a single column format, not including references),
- following the submission guidelines.
- Selection process: Peer-Reviewed
- Presentation format: Participation in the conference poster session
- Proceedings: Included in Adjunct Proceedings and ACM Digital Library
- LBR Co-chairs: Fabien Ringeval and Nikita Soni
Late-Breaking Work (LBR) submissions represent work such as preliminary results, provoking and current topics, novel experiences or interactions that may not have been fully validated yet, cutting-edge or emerging work that is still in exploratory stages, smaller-scale studies, or in general, work that has not yet reached a level of maturity expected for the full-length main track papers. However, LBR papers are still expected to bring a contribution to the ICMI community, commensurate with the preliminary, short, and quasi-informal nature of this track.
Accepted LBR papers will be presented as posters during the conference. This provides an opportunity for researchers to receive feedback on early-stage work, explore potential collaborations, and otherwise engage in exciting thought-provoking discussions about their work in an informal setting that is significantly less constrained than a paper presentation. The LBR (posters) track also offers those new to the ICMI community a chance to share their preliminary research as they become familiar with this field.
Late-Breaking Results papers appear in the Adjunct Proceedings (Companion Volume) of the ICMI Proceedings. Copyright is retained by the authors, and the material from these papers can be used as the basis for future publications as long as there are “significant” revisions from the original, as per the ACM and ACM SIGCHI policies.
Extended Abstract: An anonymized short paper, seven-page paper in a single column format, not including references. The instructions and templates are on the following link: https://www.acm.org/publications/taps/word-template-workflow. The paper should be submitted in PDF format and through the ICMI submission system in the “Late-Breaking Results” track. Due to the tight publication timeline, it is recommended that authors submit a very nearly finalized paper that is as close to camera-ready as possible, as there will be a very short timeframe for preparing the final camera-ready version and no deadline extensions can be granted.
Anonymization: Authors are instructed not to include author information in their submission. In order to help reviewers judge the situation of the LBR to prior work, authors should not remove or anonymize references to their own prior work. Instead, we recommend that authors obscure references to their own prior work by referring to it in the third person during submission. If desired, after acceptance, such references can be changed to first-person.
LBRs will be evaluated to the extent that they are presenting work still in progress, rather than complete work which is under-described in order to fit into the LBR format. The LBR track will undergo an external peer review process. Submissions will be evaluated by a number of factors including (1) the relevance of the work to ICMI, (2) the quality of the submission, and (3) the degree to which it “fits” the LBR track (e.g., in-progress results). More particularly, the quality of the submission will be evaluated based on the potential contributions of the research to the field of multimodal interfaces and its impact on the field and beyond. Authors should clearly justify how the proposed ideas can bring some measurable breakthroughs compared to the state-of-the-art of the field.
Similar rules for registration and attendance will be applied for authors of LBR papers as for regular papers. Further information will be available later on and given on the main page of the website.
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3-3-8 | (2022-11-14) IberSPEECH 2022, Grenada, Spain
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3-3-9 | (2022-11-14)) CfP SPECOM 2022, Gurugram, India (updated)
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SPECOM-2022 – CALL FOR PAPERS
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The conference is relocated in India.
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SPECOM-2022 – FINAL CALL FOR PAPERS
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24th International Conference on Speech and Computer (SPECOM-2022)
November 14-16, 2022, KIIT Campus, Gurugram, India
Web: www.specom.co.in
ORGANIZER
The conference is organized by KIIT College of Engineering as a hybrid event both in Gurugram/New Delhi, India and online.
CONFERENCE TOPICS
SPECOM attracts researchers, linguists and engineers working in the following areas of speech science, speech technology, natural language processing, and human-computer interaction:
Affective computing
Audio-visual speech processing
Corpus linguistics
Computational paralinguistics
Deep learning for audio processing
Feature extraction
Forensic speech investigations
Human-machine interaction
Language identification
Multichannel signal processing
Multimedia processing
Multimodal analysis and synthesis
Sign language processing
Speaker recognition
Speech and language resources
Speech analytics and audio mining
Speech and voice disorders
Speech-based applications
Speech driving systems in robotics
Speech enhancement
Speech perception
Speech recognition and understanding
Speech synthesis
Speech translation systems
Spoken dialogue systems
Spoken language processing
Text mining and sentiment analysis
Virtual and augmented reality
Voice assistants
OFFICIAL LANGUAGE
The official language of the event is English. However, papers on processing of languages other than English are strongly encouraged.
FORMAT OF THE CONFERENCE
The conference program will include presentations of invited talks, oral presentations, and poster/demonstration sessions.
SUBMISSION OF PAPERS
Authors are invited to submit full papers of 8-14 pages formatted in the Springer LNCS style. Each paper will be reviewed by at least three independent reviewers (single-blind), and accepted papers will be presented either orally or as posters. Papers submitted to SPECOM must not be under review by any other conference or publication during the SPECOM review cycle, and must not be previously published or accepted for publication elsewhere. The authors are asked to submit their papers using the on-line submission system: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=specom2022
PROCEEDINGS
SPECOM Proceedings will be published by Springer as a book in the Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence (LNAI/LNCS) series listed in all major international citation databases.
IMPORTANT DATES (extended!)
August 16, 2022 .................. Submission of full papers
September 13, 2022 ........... Notification of acceptance
September 20, 2022 ........... Camera-ready papers
September 27, 2022 ........... Early registration
November 14-16, 2022 .......Conference dates
GENERAL CHAIR/CO-CHAIR
Shyam S Agrawal - KIIT, Gurugram
Amita Dev - IGDTUW, Delhi
TECHNICAL CHAIR/CO-CHAIRS
S.R. Mahadeva Prasanna - IIT Dharwad
Alexey Karpov - SPC RAS
Rodmonga Potapova - MSLU
K. Samudravijaya - KL University
CONTACTS
All correspondence regarding the conference should be addressed to SPECOM 2022 Secretariat
E-mail: specomkiit@kiitworld.in
Web: www.specom.co.in
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3-3-10 | (2022-11-30) Third workshop on Resources for African Indigenous Language (RAIL), Potchefstroom, South Africa
Final call for papers
Third workshop on Resources for African Indigenous Language (RAIL) https://bit.ly/rail2022
The South African Centre for Digital Language Resources (SADiLaR) is organising the 3rd RAIL workshop in the field of Resources for African Indigenous Languages. This workshop aims to bring together researchers who are interested in showcasing their research and thereby boosting the field of African indigenous languages. This provides an overview of the current state-of-the-art and emphasizes availability of African indigenous language resources, including both data and tools. Additionally, it will allow for information sharing among researchers interested in African indigenous languages and also start discussions on improving the quality and availability of the resources. Many African indigenous languages currently have no or very limited resources available and, additionally, they are often structurally quite different from more well-resourced languages, requiring the development and use of specialized techniques. By bringing together researchers from different fields (e.g., (computational) linguistics, sociolinguistics, language technology) to discuss the development of language resources for African indigenous languages, we hope to boost research in this field.
The RAIL workshop is an interdisciplinary platform for researchers working on resources (data collections, tools, etc.) specifically targeted towards African indigenous languages. It aims to create the conditions for the emergence of a scientific community of practice that focuses on data, as well as tools, specifically designed for or applied to indigenous languages found in Africa.
Suggested topics include the following: * Digital representations of linguistic structures * Descriptions of corpora or other data sets of African indigenous languages * Building resources for (under resourced) African indigenous languages * Developing and using African indigenous languages in the digital age * Effectiveness of digital technologies for the development of African indigenous languages * Revealing unknown or unpublished existing resources for African indigenous languages * Developing desired resources for African indigenous languages * Improving quality, availability and accessibility of African indigenous language resources
The 3rd RAIL workshop 2022 will be co-located with the 10th Southern African Microlinguistics Workshop ( https://sites.google.com/nwulettere.co.za/samwop-10/home). This will be an in-person event located in Potchefstroom, South Africa. Registration will be free.
RAIL 2022 submission requirements: * RAIL asks for full papers from 4 pages to 8 pages (plus more pages for references if needed), which must strictly follow the Journal of the Digital Humanities Association of Southern Africa style guide ( https://upjournals.up.ac.za/index.php/dhasa/libraryFiles/downloadPublic/30 ). * Accepted submissions will be published in JDHASA, the Journal of the Digital Humanities Association of Southern Africa ( https://upjournals.up.ac.za/index.php/dhasa/). * Papers will be double blind peer-reviewed and must be submitted through EasyChair (https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=rail2022).
Important dates Submission deadline: 28 August 2022 Date of notification: 30 September 2022 Camera ready copy deadline: 23 October 2022 RAIL: 30 November 2022, North-West University - Potchefstroom SAMWOP: 1 – 3 December 2022, North-West University - Potchefstroom
Organising Committee Jessica Mabaso Rooweither Mabuya Muzi Matfunjwa Mmasibidi Setaka Menno van Zaanen
South African Centre for Digital Language Resources (SADiLaR), South Africa
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3-3-11 | (2022-12-13) CfP 18th Australasian International Conference on Speech Science and Technology (SST2022), Canberra, Australia
SST2022: CALL FOR PAPERSThe Australasian Speech Science and Technology Association is pleased to call for papers for the 18th Australasian International Conference on Speech Science and Technology (SST2022). SST is an international interdisciplinary conference designed to foster collaboration among speech scientists, engineers, psycholinguists, audiologists, linguists, speech/language pathologists and industrial partners. ? Location: Canberra, Australia (remote participation options will also be available) ? Dates: 13-16 December 2022 ? Host Institution: Australian National University ? Deadline for tutorial and special session proposals: 8 April 2022 ? Deadline for submissions: 17 June 2022 ? Notification of acceptance: 31 August 2022 ? Deadline for upload of revised submissions: 16 September 2022 ? Website: www.sst2022.comSubmissions are invited in all areas of speech science and technology, including: ? Acoustic phonetics ? Analysis of paralinguistics in speech and language ? Applications of speech science and technology ? Audiology ? Computer assisted language learning ? Corpus management and speech tools ? First language acquisition ? Forensic phonetics ? Hearing and hearing impairment ? Languages of Australia and Asia-Pacific (phonetics/phonology) ? Low-resource languages ? Pedagogical technologies for speech ? Second language acquisition ? Sociophonetics ? Speech signal processing, analysis, modelling and enhancement ? Speech pathology ? Speech perception ? Speech production ? Speech prosody, emotional speech, voice quality ? Speech synthesis and speech recognition ? Spoken language processing, translation, information retrieval and summarization ? Speaker and language recognition ? Spoken dialog systems and analysis of conversation ? Voice mechanisms, source-filter interactions We are inviting two categories of submission: 4-page papers (for oral or poster presentation, and publication in the proceedings), and 1-page detailed abstracts (for poster presentation only). Please follow the author instructions in preparing your submission. We also invite proposals for tutorials, as 3-hour intensive instructional sessions to be held on the first day of the conference. In addition, we welcome proposals for special sessions, as thematic groupings of papers exploring specific topics or challenges. Interdisciplinary special sessions are particularly encouraged. For any queries, please contact sst2022conf@gmail.com.
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3-3-12 | (2023-01-04) SIVA workshop @ Waikoloa Beach Marriott Resort, Hawaii, USA.
CALL FOR PAPERS: SIVA'23 Workshop on Socially Interactive Human-like Virtual Agents From expressive and context-aware multimodal generation of digital humans to understanding the social cognition of real humans
Submission (to be openened July, 22 2022): https://cmt3.research.microsoft.com/SIVA2023 SIVA'23 workshop: January, 4 or 5 2023, Waikoloa, Hawaii, https://www.stms-lab.fr/agenda/siva/detail/ FG 2023 conference: January 4-8 2023, Waikoloa, Hawaii, https://fg2023.ieee-biometrics.org/
OVERVIEW
Due to the rapid growth of virtual, augmented, and hybrid reality together with spectacular advances in artificial intelligence, the ultra-realistic generation and animation of digital humans with human-like behaviors is becoming a massive topic of interest. This complex endeavor requires modeling several elements of human behavior including the natural coordination of multimodal behaviors including text, speech, face, and body, plus the contextualization of behavior in response to interlocutors of different cultures and motivations. Thus, challenges in this topic are two folds—the generation and animation of coherent multimodal behaviors, and modeling the expressivity and contextualization of the virtual agent with respect to human behavior, plus understanding and modeling virtual agent behavior adaptation to increase human’s engagement. The aim of this workshop is to connect traditionally distinct communities (e.g., speech, vision, cognitive neurosciences, social psychology) to elaborate and discuss the future of human interaction with human-like virtual agents. We expect contributions from the fields of signal processing, speech and vision, machine learning and artificial intelligence, perceptual studies, and cognitive and neuroscience. Topics will range from multimodal generative modeling of virtual agent behaviors, and speech-to-face and posture 2D and 3D animation, to original research topics including style, expressivity, and context-aware animation of virtual agents. Moreover, the availability of controllable real-time virtual agent models can be used as state-of-the-art experimental stimuli and confederates to design novel, groundbreaking experiments to advance understanding of social cognition in humans. Finally, these virtual humans can be used to create virtual environments for medical purposes including rehabilitation and training.
SCOPE
Topics of interest include but are not limited to:
+ Analysis of Multimodal Human-like Behavior - Analyzing and understanding of human multimodal behavior (speech, gesture, face) - Creating datasets for the study and modeling of human multimodal behavior - Coordination and synchronization of human multimodal behavior - Analysis of style and expressivity in human multimodal behavior - Cultural variability of social multimodal behavior
+ Modeling and Generation of Multimodal Human-like Behavior - Multimodal generation of human-like behavior (speech, gesture, face) - Face and gesture generation driven by text and speech - Context-aware generation of multimodal human-like behavior - Modeling of style and expressivity for the generation of multimodal behavior - Modeling paralinguistic cues for multimodal behavior generation - Few-shots or zero-shot transfer of style and expressivity - Slightly-supervised adaptation of multimodal behavior to context
+ Psychology and Cognition of of Multimodal Human-like Behavior - Cognition of deep fakes and ultra-realistic digital manipulation of human-like behavior - Social agents/robots as tools for capturing, measuring and understanding multimodal behavior (speech, gesture, face) - Neuroscience and social cognition of real humans using virtual agents and physical robots
IMPORTANT DATES
Submission Deadline September, 12 2022 Notification of Acceptance: October, 15 2022 Camera-ready deadline: October, 31 2022 Workshop: January, 4 or 5 2023
VENUE
The SIVA workshop is organized as a satellite workshop of the IEEE International Conference on Automatic Face and Gesture Recognition 2023. The workshop will be collocated with the FG 2023 and WACV 2023 conferences at the Waikoloa Beach Marriott Resort, Hawaii, USA.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION AND SUBMISSION DETAILS
Submissions must be original and not published or submitted elsewhere. Short papers of 3 pages excluding references encourage submissions of early research in original emerging fields. Long paper of 6 to 8 pages excluding references promote the presentation of strongly original contributions, positional or survey papers. The manuscript should be formatted according to the Word or Latex template provided on the workshop website. All submissions will be reviewed by 3 reviewers. The reviewing process will be single-blinded. Authors will be asked to disclose possible conflict of interests, such as cooperation in the previous two years. Moreover, care will be taken to avoid reviewers from the same institution as the authors. Authors should submit their articles in a single pdf file in the submission website - no later than September, 12 2022. Notification of acceptance will be sent by October, 15 2022, and the camera-ready version of the papers revised according to the reviewers comments should be submitted by October, 31 2022. Accepted papers will be published in the proceedings of the FG'2023 conference. More information can be found on the SIVA website.
DIVERSITY, EQUALITY, AND INCLUSION
The format of this workshop will be hybrid online and onsite. This format proposes format of scientific exchanges in order to satisfy travel restrictions and COVID sanitary precautions, to promote inclusion in the research community (travel costs are high, online presentations will encourage research contributions from geographical regions which would normally be excluded), and to consider ecological issues (e.g., CO2 footprint). The organizing committee is committed to paying attention to equality, diversity, and inclusivity in consideration of invited speakers. This effort starts from the organizing committee and the invited speakers to the program committee.
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE 🌸 Nicolas Obin, STMS Lab (Ircam, CNRS, Sorbonne Université, ministère de la Culture) 🌸 Ryo Ishii, NTT Human Informatics Laboratories 🌸 Rachael E. Jack, University of Glasgow 🌸 Louis-Philippe Morency, Carnegie Mellon University 🌸 Catherine Pelachaud, CNRS - ISIR, Sorbonne UniversitéCALL FOR PAPERS: SIVA'23 Workshop on Socially Interactive Human-like Virtual Agents From expressive and context-aware multimodal generation of digital humans to understanding the social cognition of real humans
Submission (to be openened July, 22 2022): https://cmt3.research.microsoft.com/SIVA2023 SIVA'23 workshop: January, 4 or 5 2023, Waikoloa, Hawaii, https://www.stms-lab.fr/agenda/siva/detail/ FG 2023 conference: January 4-8 2023, Waikoloa, Hawaii, https://fg2023.ieee-biometrics.org/
OVERVIEW
Due to the rapid growth of virtual, augmented, and hybrid reality together with spectacular advances in artificial intelligence, the ultra-realistic generation and animation of digital humans with human-like behaviors is becoming a massive topic of interest. This complex endeavor requires modeling several elements of human behavior including the natural coordination of multimodal behaviors including text, speech, face, and body, plus the contextualization of behavior in response to interlocutors of different cultures and motivations. Thus, challenges in this topic are two folds—the generation and animation of coherent multimodal behaviors, and modeling the expressivity and contextualization of the virtual agent with respect to human behavior, plus understanding and modeling virtual agent behavior adaptation to increase human’s engagement. The aim of this workshop is to connect traditionally distinct communities (e.g., speech, vision, cognitive neurosciences, social psychology) to elaborate and discuss the future of human interaction with human-like virtual agents. We expect contributions from the fields of signal processing, speech and vision, machine learning and artificial intelligence, perceptual studies, and cognitive and neuroscience. Topics will range from multimodal generative modeling of virtual agent behaviors, and speech-to-face and posture 2D and 3D animation, to original research topics including style, expressivity, and context-aware animation of virtual agents. Moreover, the availability of controllable real-time virtual agent models can be used as state-of-the-art experimental stimuli and confederates to design novel, groundbreaking experiments to advance understanding of social cognition in humans. Finally, these virtual humans can be used to create virtual environments for medical purposes including rehabilitation and training.
SCOPE
Topics of interest include but are not limited to:
+ Analysis of Multimodal Human-like Behavior - Analyzing and understanding of human multimodal behavior (speech, gesture, face) - Creating datasets for the study and modeling of human multimodal behavior - Coordination and synchronization of human multimodal behavior - Analysis of style and expressivity in human multimodal behavior - Cultural variability of social multimodal behavior
+ Modeling and Generation of Multimodal Human-like Behavior - Multimodal generation of human-like behavior (speech, gesture, face) - Face and gesture generation driven by text and speech - Context-aware generation of multimodal human-like behavior - Modeling of style and expressivity for the generation of multimodal behavior - Modeling paralinguistic cues for multimodal behavior generation - Few-shots or zero-shot transfer of style and expressivity - Slightly-supervised adaptation of multimodal behavior to context
+ Psychology and Cognition of of Multimodal Human-like Behavior - Cognition of deep fakes and ultra-realistic digital manipulation of human-like behavior - Social agents/robots as tools for capturing, measuring and understanding multimodal behavior (speech, gesture, face) - Neuroscience and social cognition of real humans using virtual agents and physical robots
IMPORTANT DATES
Submission Deadline September, 12 2022 Notification of Acceptance: October, 15 2022 Camera-ready deadline: October, 31 2022 Workshop: January, 4 or 5 2023
VENUE
The SIVA workshop is organized as a satellite workshop of the IEEE International Conference on Automatic Face and Gesture Recognition 2023. The workshop will be collocated with the FG 2023 and WACV 2023 conferences at the Waikoloa Beach Marriott Resort, Hawaii, USA.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION AND SUBMISSION DETAILS
Submissions must be original and not published or submitted elsewhere. Short papers of 3 pages excluding references encourage submissions of early research in original emerging fields. Long paper of 6 to 8 pages excluding references promote the presentation of strongly original contributions, positional or survey papers. The manuscript should be formatted according to the Word or Latex template provided on the workshop website. All submissions will be reviewed by 3 reviewers. The reviewing process will be single-blinded. Authors will be asked to disclose possible conflict of interests, such as cooperation in the previous two years. Moreover, care will be taken to avoid reviewers from the same institution as the authors. Authors should submit their articles in a single pdf file in the submission website - no later than September, 12 2022. Notification of acceptance will be sent by October, 15 2022, and the camera-ready version of the papers revised according to the reviewers comments should be submitted by October, 31 2022. Accepted papers will be published in the proceedings of the FG'2023 conference. More information can be found on the SIVA website.
DIVERSITY, EQUALITY, AND INCLUSION
The format of this workshop will be hybrid online and onsite. This format proposes format of scientific exchanges in order to satisfy travel restrictions and COVID sanitary precautions, to promote inclusion in the research community (travel costs are high, online presentations will encourage research contributions from geographical regions which would normally be excluded), and to consider ecological issues (e.g., CO2 footprint). The organizing committee is committed to paying attention to equality, diversity, and inclusivity in consideration of invited speakers. This effort starts from the organizing committee and the invited speakers to the program committee.
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE 🌸 Nicolas Obin, STMS Lab (Ircam, CNRS, Sorbonne Université, ministère de la Culture)52023-01)04) 🌸 Ryo Ishii, NTT Human Informatics Laboratories 🌸 Rachael E. Jack, University of Glasgow 🌸 Louis-Philippe Morency, Carnegie Mellon University 🌸 Catherine Pelachaud, CNRS - ISIR, Sorbonne Université
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3-3-13 | (2023-01-04) Workshop on Socially Interactive Human-like Virtual Agents (SIVA'23), Waikoloa, Hawaii
CALL FOR PAPERS: SIVA'23 Workshop on Socially Interactive Human-like Virtual Agents From expressive and context-aware multimodal generation of digital humans to understanding the social cognition of real humans Submission (to be openened July, 22 2022): https://cmt3.research.microsoft.com/SIVA2023SIVA'23 workshop: January, 4 or 5 2023, Waikoloa, Hawaii, https://www.stms-lab.fr/agenda/siva/detail/FG 2023 conference: January 4-8 2023, Waikoloa, Hawaii, https://fg2023.ieee-biometrics.org/OVERVIEW Due to the rapid growth of virtual, augmented, and hybrid reality together with spectacular advances in artificial intelligence, the ultra-realistic generation and animation of digital humans with human-like behaviors is becoming a massive topic of interest. This complex endeavor requires modeling several elements of human behavior including the natural coordination of multimodal behaviors including text, speech, face, and body, plus the contextualization of behavior in response to interlocutors of different cultures and motivations. Thus, challenges in this topic are two folds—the generation and animation of coherent multimodal behaviors, and modeling the expressivity and contextualization of the virtual agent with respect to human behavior, plus understanding and modeling virtual agent behavior adaptation to increase human’s engagement. The aim of this workshop is to connect traditionally distinct communities (e.g., speech, vision, cognitive neurosciences, social psychology) to elaborate and discuss the future of human interaction with human-like virtual agents. We expect contributions from the fields of signal processing, speech and vision, machine learning and artificial intelligence, perceptual studies, and cognitive and neuroscience. Topics will range from multimodal generative modeling of virtual agent behaviors, and speech-to-face and posture 2D and 3D animation, to original research topics including style, expressivity, and context-aware animation of virtual agents. Moreover, the availability of controllable real-time virtual agent models can be used as state-of-the-art experimental stimuli and confederates to design novel, groundbreaking experiments to advance understanding of social cognition in humans. Finally, these virtual humans can be used to create virtual environments for medical purposes including rehabilitation and training. SCOPE Topics of interest include but are not limited to: + Analysis of Multimodal Human-like Behavior - Analyzing and understanding of human multimodal behavior (speech, gesture, face) - Creating datasets for the study and modeling of human multimodal behavior - Coordination and synchronization of human multimodal behavior - Analysis of style and expressivity in human multimodal behavior - Cultural variability of social multimodal behavior + Modeling and Generation of Multimodal Human-like Behavior - Multimodal generation of human-like behavior (speech, gesture, face) - Face and gesture generation driven by text and speech - Context-aware generation of multimodal human-like behavior - Modeling of style and expressivity for the generation of multimodal behavior - Modeling paralinguistic cues for multimodal behavior generation - Few-shots or zero-shot transfer of style and expressivity - Slightly-supervised adaptation of multimodal behavior to context + Psychology and Cognition of of Multimodal Human-like Behavior - Cognition of deep fakes and ultra-realistic digital manipulation of human-like behavior - Social agents/robots as tools for capturing, measuring and understanding multimodal behavior (speech, gesture, face) - Neuroscience and social cognition of real humans using virtual agents and physical robots IMPORTANT DATES Submission Deadline September, 12 2022 Notification of Acceptance: October, 15 2022 Camera-ready deadline: October, 31 2022 Workshop: January, 4 or 5 2023 VENUE The SIVA workshop is organized as a satellite workshop of the IEEE International Conference on Automatic Face and Gesture Recognition 2023. The workshop will be collocated with the FG 2023 and WACV 2023 conferences at the Waikoloa Beach Marriott Resort, Hawaii, USA. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION AND SUBMISSION DETAILS Submissions must be original and not published or submitted elsewhere. Short papers of 3 pages excluding references encourage submissions of early research in original emerging fields. Long paper of 6 to 8 pages excluding references promote the presentation of strongly original contributions, positional or survey papers. The manuscript should be formatted according to the Word or Latex template provided on the workshop website. All submissions will be reviewed by 3 reviewers. The reviewing process will be single-blinded. Authors will be asked to disclose possible conflict of interests, such as cooperation in the previous two years. Moreover, care will be taken to avoid reviewers from the same institution as the authors. Authors should submit their articles in a single pdf file in the submission website - no later than September, 12 2022. Notification of acceptance will be sent by October, 15 2022, and the camera-ready version of the papers revised according to the reviewers comments should be submitted by October, 31 2022. Accepted papers will be published in the proceedings of the FG'2023 conference. More information can be found on the SIVA website. DIVERSITY, EQUALITY, AND INCLUSION The format of this workshop will be hybrid online and onsite. This format proposes format of scientific exchanges in order to satisfy travel restrictions and COVID sanitary precautions, to promote inclusion in the research community (travel costs are high, online presentations will encourage research contributions from geographical regions which would normally be excluded), and to consider ecological issues (e.g., CO2 footprint). The organizing committee is committed to paying attention to equality, diversity, and inclusivity in consideration of invited speakers. This effort starts from the organizing committee and the invited speakers to the program committee. ORGANIZING COMMITTEE 🌸 Nicolas Obin, STMS Lab (Ircam, CNRS, Sorbonne Université, ministère de la Culture) 🌸 Ryo Ishii, NTT Human Informatics Laboratories 🌸 Rachael E. Jack, University of Glasgow 🌸 Louis-Philippe Morency, Carnegie Mellon University 🌸 Catherine Pelachaud, CNRS - ISIR, Sorbonne Université
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3-3-14 | (2023-01-16) Advanced Language Processing School (ALPS), Grenoble, France
SECOND CALL FOR PARTICIPATION
Advanced Language Processing School (ALPS)
January, 16-20 2023
Virtual Event
We are opening the registration for the third Advanced Language Processing School (ALPS), co-organized by University Grenoble Alpes and Naver Labs Europe.
*Target Audience*
This is a winter school covering advanced topics in NLP, and we are primarily targeting doctoral students and advanced (research) masters. A few slots will also be reserved for academics and persons working in research-heavy positions in industry.
*Characteristics*
Advanced lectures by first class researchers. A (virtual) atmosphere that fosters connections and interaction. A poster session for attendees to present their work, gather feedback and brainstorm future work ideas.
*Speakers*
The current list of speakers is: Michael Auli (Meta, USA), Kyunghyun Cho (New York University, USA); Yejin Choi (University of Washington and Allen Institute for AI, USA); Dirk Hovy (Bocconi University, Italia); Colin Raffel (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Hugging Face, USA); Lucia Specia (Imperial College, UK), François Yvon (LISN/CNRS, France).
*Application*
*Contact*
E-mail: alps@univ-grenoble-alpes.fr
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3-3-15 | (2023-06-04) CfP ICASSP 2023, Rhodes Island, Greece
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3-3-16 | (2023-06-04) CfSatellite Workshops ICASSP 2023, Rhodes Island, Greece
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3-3-17 | (2023-06-12)) 13th International Conference on Multimedia Retrieval, Thessaloniki, Greece
ICMR2023 – ACM International Conference on Multimedia Retrieval
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3-3-18 | (2023-06-15) JPC (Journées de Phonétique Clinique) 2023, Toulouse, France
JPC (Journées de Phonétique Clinique) 2023
Toulouse du 15 au 17 juin 2023 - Save the date !
Appel à communications à venir !
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3-3-19 | (2023-07-15) MLDM 2023 : 18th International Conference on Machine Learning and Data Mining, New York,NY, USA
MLDM 2023 : 18th International Conference on Machine Learning and Data Mining http://www.mldm.de When Jul 16, 2023 - Jul 21, 2023 Where New York, USA Submission Deadline Jan 15, 2023 Notification Due Mar 18, 2023 Final Version Due Apr 5, 2023 Categories: machine learning data mining pattern recognition classification Call For Papers MLDM 2023 18th International Conference on Machine Learning and Data Mining July 15 - 19, 2023, New York, USA
The Aim of the Conference The aim of the conference is to bring together researchers from all over the world who deal with machine learning and data mining in order to discuss the recent status of the research and to direct further developments. Basic research papers as well as application papers are welcome.
Chair Petra Perner Institute of Computer Vision and Applied Computer Sciences IBaI, Germany
Program Committee Piotr Artiemjew University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn, Poland Sung-Hyuk Cha Pace Universtity, USA Ming-Ching Chang University of Albany, USA Mark J. Embrechts Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and CardioMag Imaging, Inc, USA Robert Haralick City University of New York, USA Adam Krzyzak Concordia University, Canada Chengjun Liu New Jersey Institute of Technology, USA Krzysztof Pancerz University Rzeszow, Poland Dan Simovici University of Massachusetts Boston, USA Agnieszka Wosiak Lodz University of Technology, Poland more to be annouced...
Topics of the conference
Paper submissions should be related but not limited to any of the following topics:
Association Rules Audio Mining Autoamtic Semantic Annotation of Media Content Bayesian Models and Methods Capability Indices Case-Based Reasoning and Associative Memory case-based reasoning and learning Classification & Prediction classification and interpretation of images, text, video Classification and Model Estimation Clustering Cognition and Computer Vision Conceptional Learning conceptional learning and clustering Content-Based Image Retrieval Control Charts Decision Trees Design of Experiment Desirabilities Deviation and Novelty Detection Feature Grouping, Discretization, Selection and Transformation Feature Learning Frequent Pattern Mining https://www.icphs2023.org/, where it is also possible to register for email notifications concerning the congress.
Contact: icphs2023@guarant.cz
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