ISCApad #184 |
Friday, October 11, 2013 by Chris Wellekens |
3-3-1 | (2013-10-15) 10th International Workshop on Natural Language Processing and Cognitive Science (NLPCS 2013) Marseille France NLPCS 2013 10th International Workshop on Natural Language Processing and Cognitive Science 15-16 October, 2013 (workshop), 17-18 October, 2013 (tutorials, to be confirmed) CIRM, Marseille, France, https://sites.google.com/site/nlpcs2013/home/ The aim of this workshop is to foster interactions among researchers and practitioners in Natural Language Processing (NLP) by taking a Cognitive Science perspective. What characterises this kind of approach is the fact that NLP is considered from various viewpoints (linguistics, psychology, neurosciences, artificial intelligence,...), and that a deliberate effort is made to reconcile or integrate them into a coherent whole. We believe that this is necessary, as the modelling of the process is simply too complex to be addressed by a single discipline. No matter whether we deal with a natural or artificial system (people or computers) or a combination of both (interactive NLP), systems rely on many types of very different knowledge sources. Hence, strategies vary considerably depending on the person (novice, expert), on the available knowledge (internal and external), and on the nature of the information processor: human, machines or both (human-machine communication). This being so we are interested in theoretical or applied work (including simulations). Hence, any of the following aspects are welcomed: structure, representation and processing of information by different agents (natural, artificial or both) and in different communication modes. IMPORTANT DATES Paper Submission: 15 June, 2013 Authors’ Notification: 31 July 15, 2013 Final Paper Submission : 15 September, 2013 CO-CHAIRS Bernadette Sharp, Staffordshire University, United Kingdom b.sharp@staffs.ac.uk Michael Zock, CNRS-LIF, Aix-Marseille Université, France michael.zock@lif.univ-mrs.fr ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
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3-3-2 | (2013-10-18) The 2013 Similar Segments in Social Speech Task Barcelona Spain The 2013 Similar Segments in Social Speech Task
With users' growing willingness to share personal activity information, the eventual acceptance of social multimedia, including video and audio recordings of casual interactions, is inevitable. To unlock the potential value, we need to develop methods for searching such recordings, and this task is intended to support research in this area. It is likely to be of interest to researchers in the areas of speech technology, information retrieval, dialog, and topic modeling. The task involves searching in social multimedia, specifically conversations between students in an academic department. The scenario is this: A new member has joined an organization or social group that has a small archive of conversations among its members. He starts to listen, looking for any information that can help him better understand, participate in, enjoy, find friends in, and succeed in this group. As he listens to the archive (perhaps at random, perhaps based on some social tags, perhaps based on an initial keyword search) he finds something of interest, and wants to find more like it, across the entire archive. He marks what he found as a region of interest and requests more like it. The system comes back with a set of ``jump-in'' points, places in the archive to which he could jump and start listening/watching with the expectation of finding something similar.
Task schedule (tentative) April 1: Familiarization pack release May 1: Development data release July 1: Test set release September 5 : Run submission deadline October 18-19: Workshop, in Barcelona This task is organized under the auspices of MediaEval 2013.
Further information is available at http://www.multimediaeval.org/mediaeval2013/socialspeech2013/ and http://www.cs.utep.edu/nigel/ssss/, or from the organizers: Nigel Ward, University of Texas at El Paso, USA; David G. Novick, University of Texas at El Paso, USA; Tatsuya Kawahara, Kyoto University, Japan; Elizabeth Shriberg, Microsoft, USA; Louis-Philippe Morency, University of Southern California, USA; Catharine Oertel, KTH, Sweden.
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3-3-3 | (2013-10-21) 3rd International Audio/Visual Emotion Challenge and Workshop Barcelona, Spain AVEC 2013 3rd International Audio/Visual Emotion Challenge and Workshop Depression and Continuous Emotion
Satellite Workshop of ACM Multimedia 2013 Fully‐day Workshop October 21 – 25 (t.b.d.), Barcelona, Catalunya, Spain ____________________________________________________________
This year there will be two sub-challenges: the first is fully continuous dimensional affect recognition (similar to AVEC 2012), but it is the second sub-challenge that makes this AVEC very special indeed: estimation of self-reported level of depression on over 150 recordings of people suffering from depression performing a standardised human computer interaction task. This sub challenge has a single label associated with every recording, making it also a very different machine learning problem compared to the previous challenges.
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3-3-4 | (2013-10-23) 5ème Journées de Phonétique Clinique (JPhC) , Liège (Belgique). 5ème Journées de Phonétique Clinique (JPhC) qui auront lieu à Liège les 23, 24, 25 octobre 2013. Extended deadline May 22 2013 Ces journées ont vu le jour à Paris en 2005 (www.cavi.univ-paris3.fr/ilpga/JPC-2005/). En 2007, elles se sont déroulées à Grenoble, en 2009 à Aix-en-Provence (aune.lpl.univ-aix.fr/~jpc3/) et en 2011 à Strasbourg (journees-phonetique-clinique.u-strasbg.fr/). Elles ont lieu tous les deux ans. L’année 2013 sera Liégeoise (Belgique). En effet, elles seront organisées par le service de Logopédie de la Voix de l'Université de Liège de psychologie: cognition et comportement) en étroite collaboration avec le Laboratoires d'Images, Signaux et Dispositifs de Télécommunications de l’Université Libre de Bruxelles.
La phonétique réunit principalement des chercheurs, enseignants-chercheurs, ingénieurs, médecins et orthophoniste / logopèdes ; différentes corps de métiers complémentaires qui poursuivent le même objectif : une meilleure connaissance des processus d'acquisition, de développement et de dégénérescence du langage, de la parole et de la voix. Cette approche interdisciplinaire vise à optimiser les connaissances fondamentales relatives à la communication parlée, dans le but de mieux comprendre, évaluer, et remédier aux troubles de la parole et de la voix chez le sujet pathologique.
Dans ce contexte, cette série de colloques internationaux sur la production et la perception de la parole, chez le sujet pathologique, représente une opportunité pour des professionnels, des chercheurs confirmés etdes jeu nes chercheurs de formations différentes de présenter des résultats expérimentaux nouveaux et d’échanger des idées de diverses perspectives. Les communications porteront sur les études de la parole et de la voix pathologiques, chez l’adulte et chez l’enfant.
Nous espérons vous voir nombreux à ces 5ème Journées de Phonétique Clinique. Vous trouverez plus d’informations en visitant le site à l’adresse suivante : https://w3.fapse.ulg.ac.be/conferences/JPhC5/index.php Calendrier Date d'ouverture des soumissions : 1 janvier 2013 Nouvelle date limite de soumission : 22 mai 2013 Date de notification aux auteurs : 1 juillet 2013 Programme officiel : 15 juillet 2013 Date limite d’inscription : 1er septembre 2013 (majoration de 30 euros au-delà de cette date) Date du colloque : 23 – 25 octobre 2013
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3-3-5 | (2013-10-29) Multimodal Social Signals of conflict and negotiation in humans, animals, and machines, Roma
Universita’ Roma Tre Aula Magna Department of Philosophy, Communication, and Screen and Stage studies Via Ostiense 234 - Roma
October 29 – 31, 2013 http://www.dcs.gla.ac.uk/~vincia/conflict/index.html
International Workshop
Conflict and communication. Multimodal Social Signals of conflict and negotiation in humans, animals, and machines
When in an environment resources are limited, and two or more humans or other animals need the same resource, its attainment by one is incompatible with the attainment by the other: thus conflict arises. Conflict may simply hold between two or more beliefs (cognitive conflict), or between goals of the same person or animal (intraindividual conflict), or finally between the goals of two or more individuals or groups (interpersonal and social conflict). In all cases conflict may cause internal turmoil or social aggression, and yet sometimes may also be a carrier of positive novelty and change. This workshop focuses on interpersonal and social conflict, and on the communication that may arise from it, but also give rise to it, or finally determine conflict escalation or resolution. Since such a complex topic as conflict needs to be confronted by a high level of multidisciplinarity, we encourage contributions from various fields, among which: Psychology, Ethology, Political Sciences, Neuroscience, Linguistics, Argumentation, Social Simulation, Robotics, Social Signal processing, Swarm intelligence….
Some core topics in the workshop, and their leading questions, are the following:
Theoretical issues in conflict What is conflict, and what is the boundary between competition and conflict? Are all cases of aggression determined by conflict, and does conflict always lead to aggression? What are the mechanisms and triggering rules of escalation and what are those of negotiation? Sometimes conflicts are not explicit or evident, but rather deep, underground, covert. What are the signals of overt and covert conflicts? What are the routes of conflict? Is conflict primary (only stemming from context, bare competition over resources) or sometimes secondary to emotions (for instance might one start to raise conflict with another only due to personality clash)? What are the dynamics of conflict? Some theories propose that social hierarchies and leadership arise right with the function of minimizing conflicts. Is this (always) true? Are there types of social organization or leadership more apt than others to prevent conflict? What could / should be changed in an organization to lower the number and level of conflicts? Do the ways people and animals sense and manage conflict and its escalation and resolution change across ontogenetic and phylogenetic evolution, and if so, how do they? Are there neurological bases to the capacity of sensing and managing social conflict?
Social signals and multimodality How is conflict expressed in communicative interaction between humans? How do the various types of conflict differ from each other, for example, discussion, argument, quarrel, contest? Do different rules apply to them? One of the main communicative forms triggered by conflict is argumentation. Can we distinguish more and less conflictual argumentations? What are the signals that reveal the existence of conflict, escalation, de-escalation, negotiation, smoothing? What are the signals of conflict between non-human animals? Are there signals shared by human and non-human animals? Conflictual communication may be studied in various modalities. In the acoustic modalities, what are the characterizing features of voice or noise in conflict? Can conflict be expressed by music? Are some types of intonation more typically used during conflict? Are there speech acts or other communicative acts typical of conflict, such as accusation, criticism, insult? How is conflict expressed in the structure of turn-taking and floor management? Are there cues of conflict in intonation and voice quality? In the visual modalities, what are the gestures, postures, gaze items and facial expressions typically used in conflict? Can conflict be expressed by art, graphics and other visual artifacts?
Ethical issues, deception and non-cooperative communication in conflict Is there an ethics of conflict? Are there moral rules for negotiation or reconciliation? Are there cases in which conflict cannot be avoided, or negotiation should be skipped, due to ethical reasons? Does negotiation often entail deception? What are the effects of truthful and deceitful communication on conflict? Is deception exploited to avoid conflict or is it a major cause of conflict? Sometimes sincere communication, by making the conflict explicit, may contribute to exacerbate it, so people may try to avoid sincerity or use hypocrisy or vagueness to prevent conflict; but on the other hand, if one lets conflict emerge, might this contribute, and in what cases and ways, to clarify positions, look for agreement, and start negotiation? What is the relation of conflict with truthful and deceitful communication in animals? Generally animals tend to use deception more to prevent conflict than to find a way out of it – see the function of bluff and other deceitful displays – but is this always and necessary so?
Emotions and conflict What emotions are generally a cause of conflict, and what are the most typical effects of it? How are they expressed with or without a conflictual interaction? How can trust, envy, admiration, pride, compassion or other emotions prevent, trigger, enhance, smooth conflict? How can their sincere or simulated expression work in conflict management? What is the role of empathy and other affective states in negotiation and reconciliation?
Simulation, analysis and synthesis of conflict Is it possible to build systems for the automatic detection of conflict, both bottom up – by detecting signals of conflict – and top-down – by analyzing contexts and inferring their likeliness for conflict generation? Is it possible to construct a synthetic “negotiation counselor”? How can automatic argumentative systems be adapted to conflict prevention or resolution? How can the simulation of conflict in robots and neural systems give hints for the prevention and managing of conflict in humans?
The topics of the Workshop include, but are not limited to:
Program Committee:
Jens Allwood Francesca Cantù Marco Cristani Anna Esposito Ellen Giebels Emile Hendricks Dirk Heylen Giovanna Leone Giacomo Marramao Elio Matassi David Meghnagi Enrico Menduni Alessandro Neri Magalie Ochs Franca Orletti Fabio Paglieri Albert Ali Salah Björn Schuller
Key-note Speakers:
Judee Burgoon, Center for the Management of Information, University of Arizona http://www.borders.arizona.edu/cms/content/judee-burgoon Cristiano Calstelfranchi, Istituto di Scienze e Tecnologie della Cognizione – CNR, Roma http://www.istc.cnr.it/it/people/cristiano-castelfranchi Ellen Giebels, Centre for Conflict, Risk and Safety Perception, University of Twente http://www.utwente.nl/gw/pcrv/en/emp/giebels.doc/ Shrikanth Narayanan, Signal Analysis and Interpretation Lab, University of South California
The Workshop is open to all motivated scientists, of any nationality, both on the Social Scientists and the Computer Scientists side. To encourage young researchers’ participation, grants are available for up to 8 Participants (maximum of 600 EUROS for accommodation, living and travel expenses), upon selection of the best abstracts, of the applicants’ potential contribution to the Workshop, and the benefits that they may draw from the meeting for their future activities.
SUBMISSIONS: After the Workshop a selection of the papers presented will be published in a book of a Springer series. Abstracts and Papers should be sent to the following addresses: poggi@uniroma3.it; fderrico@uniroma3.it; laura.vincze@gmail.com;
IMPORTAT DATES:
Extended to: June 24th, 2013: Submission of abstracts (400 – 600 words) July 24th, 2013: Notification of acceptance October 29-31, 2013: Workshop November 30th, 2013: Paper submission January 20th, 2014: Notification of acceptance of papers February 28th, 2014: Camera-ready paper
Scientific organization: Isabella Poggi*, Francesca D’Errico**, Alessandro Vinciarelli***, Laura Vincze* *Università Roma Tre **Università Telematica Internazionale UNINETTUNO ***University of Glasgow
Contacts: Isabella Poggi, poggi@uniroma3.it Francesca D’Errico, fderrico@uniroma3.it Alessandro Vinciarelli, Alessandro.Vinciarelli@glasgow.ac.uk Laura Vincze, laura.vincze@gmail.com;
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3-3-6 | (2013-11-11) Human Language Technologies to the future of Language Learning Stellenbosch University (South Africa) Call for papers: HLT4LL 2013 An interdisciplinary symposium on the contribution of Human Language Technologies to the future of Language Learning
11-12 November 2013: Stellenbosch University (South Africa) 12 November 2013: Videoconferencing with Radboud University Nijmegen and KU Leuven Kulak http://hstrik.ruhosting.nl/hlt4ll-call-for-papers/
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS Nick Ellis, Maxine Eskenazi, John Nerbonne, Mathias Schulze, Isabel Trancoso
SCOPE AND AIM OF THE SYMPOSIUM The HLT4LL 2013 symposium will address the possibilities and challenges of using human language technologies (HLT) for language learning (LL) (HLT4LL). We define HLT4LL as any use or integration of language and speech technology to structure, facilitate (support) and evaluate the language learning process. To fully acknowledge and address the complexity of this interdisciplinary domain, the symposium aims to bring together representatives from various but related research fields: language and speech technology, computational linguistics, corpus linguistics (learner and bilingual corpora), data-driven language learning, (second) language acquisition, language pedagogy, computer assisted language learning (CALL), educational technology, semantic web, artificial intelligence, human-computer interaction (HCI/CHI), etc. This symposium is intended to provide a state-of-the-art overview of this interdisciplinary domain for people from academia, educational institutions, industry, as well as for policymakers.
Registration and participation are free of charge. If you want to register, send an email to HLT4LL@let.ru.nl. Mention if you want to be present in Stellenbosch, Nijmegen or Kortrijk. The number of available places is limited, we thus might have to select.
CALL FOR PAPERS We hereby solicit contributions to the research workshop on 12 November 2013. Potential authors are invited to submit a proposal for a paper or poster session related to any of the mentioned fields. Submissions can also provide feedback on the use of current applications, or suggest possible ways of optimization and propose future developments, based on a systematic investigation of the subject. All submissions will be subjected to peer review; only a limited number of contributions will be presented at the workshop. During the workshop, presenters will get feedback from the keynote speakers. During the research workshop, video conferencing facilities will be available at Radboud University (Nijmegen, The Netherlands) and at KU Leuven Kulak (Kortrijk, Belgium), which will allow researchers to present their work from remote locations. We are considering inviting presenters to submit full-length papers after the workshop, which may be published in a special issue of an authoritative, interdisciplinary and international journal in the field.
IMPORTANT DATES - 09/06/2013: Deadline for submission of extended abstract (max. 1000 words) - 14/07/2013: Notification of acceptance - 31/07/2013: Early-bird registration for accepted authors - 11/11/2013: Start of symposium at Stellenbosch University (South Africa) - 11/11/2013: Informative meeting for a general audience, incl. demo’s - 12/11/2013: Research workshop (videoconferencing with RU Nijmegen and Kulak Leuven)
HOW TO SUBMIT YOUR PROPOSAL Proposals must be sent to HLT4LL@let.ru.nl by 9 June 2013.
ORGANISERS Catia Cucchiarini & Helmer Strik (Centre for Language and Speech Technology, Radboud University, The Netherlands) Frederik Cornillie & Piet Desmet (ITEC, KU Leuven Kulak & iMinds, Belgium) Febe de Wet (Stellenbosch University, South Africa)
CONTACT US HLT4LL@let.ru.nl
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3-3-7 | (2013-11-26) CORESA 2013 Pour sa 16ème édition, le colloque CORESA 2013 (COmpression et REprésentation des Signaux Audiovisuels) sera organisé par le Laboratoire Electronique Informatique et Image (LE2I UMR 6306) et le site universitaire du Creusot de l'université de Bourgogne, les 28 et 29 Novembre 2013. Coresa 2013 est organisé conjointement avec l'Ecole Analyse Multirésolution qui se déroulera les 26 et 27 novembre 2013 (Lien vers l'édition précédente : http://multiresolution.liris.cnrs.fr)
Un tarif préférentiel permettra de participer aux deux évènements.
Dates et informations : www.coresa2013.com
soumission : 17 juin 2013
notification : 15 septembre
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3-3-8 | (2013-12-03) IEEE GlobalSIP Symposia, Austin TexasDeadline for IEEE GlobalSIP Symposia Proposals: November 15, 2012. GlobalSIP: http://www.ieeeglobalsip.org/ Austin, TX. December 3-5, 2013. IEEE Global Conference on Signal and Information Processing is a new flagship IEEE Signal Processing Society conference. It will focus on signal and information processing and up-and-coming signal processing themes. GlobalSIP comprises symposia selected based on responses to the call-for-symposia proposals. We are inviting symposia submissions on hot topics related to signal and information processing. Examples of potential topics include: Computational photography Camera networks and analytics Computational manufacturing Information systems for Big Data Processing Bio signal processing Machine learning Emerging sensing modalities Signal processing, learning and decision making in networks Green communications Data and processing for energy management Sparsity in information processing Proposals may be focused on a specific mathematical tool, or on a particular application. Successful symposia may be repeated from year to year. We are currently soliciting symposium proposals. For more information on the preparation of a symposium proposal, please refer to: http://www.ieeeglobalsip.org/SymposiaGuidelines.pdf Symposia proposals may be submitted to any one of the technical program chairs.
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3-3-9 | (2013-12-05)CfP International Workshop on Spoken Language Translation (IWSLT) , Heidelberg, Germany <Call for IWLST2013>
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3-3-10 | (2013-12-07) 6th Language and Technology Conference (LTC 2013), Poznan, PolandThe 6th Language and Technology Conference (LTC 2013), December 7-9, 2013, Poznan, Poland CALL FOR PAPERS The 6th Language and Technology Conference (LTC 2013), a meeting organized by the Faculty of Mathematics and Computer
Science of Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznan, Poland in cooperation with the Adam Mickiewicz University Foundation, will take
place on December 7-9, 2013. Since very beginning the meetings of the LTC series continue to address Human Language Technologies (HLT) as a challenge for computer science, linguistics and related fields. Fostering language technologies and resources remains an important mission in the
dynamically changing information-saturated world. We aim at contributing to this mission and we invite you to join us in that at LTC 2013 in December 2013, traditionally held in Poznań, Poland. CONFERENCE TOPICS The conference topics include the following (the ordering is not significant): * electronic language resources and tools * formalization of natural languages * parsing and other forms of NL processing * computer modeling of language competence * NL user modeling * NL understanding by computers * knowledge representation * man-machine NL interfaces * Logic Programming in Natural Language Processing * speech processing * NL applications in robotics * text-based information retrieval and extraction * question answering * tools and methodologies for developing multilingual systems * translation enhancement tools * corpora-based methods in language engineering * WordNet-like ontologies * methodological issues in HLT * language-specific computational challenges for HLTs (especially for languages other than English) * validation in all areas of HLTs * HLT standards and best practices * HLTs as a support for foreign language teaching * HLTs as support for e-learning * communicative intelligence * NLP methods in cyber-criminality detection and prevention * legal issues connected with HLTs (problems and challenges) * contribution of HLTs to the Homeland Security problems (technology applications and legal aspects) * visionary papers in the field of HLT * HLT related policies * system prototype presentations This list is by no means closed and we are open to further proposals. Please do not hesitate to contact us with new suggestions
and ideas. Please help us to understand how to best satisfy your expectations concerning the program. We are open to
suggestions concerning accompanying events (workshops, exhibits, panels, etc). Suggestions, ideas and observations may
be addressed directly to the LTC Chair by email (vetulani@amu.edu.pl <mailto:vetulani@amu.edu.pl>). LANGUAGE: The conference language is English CONTACT: ltc13@amu.edu.pl or vetulani@amu.edu.pl PAPER SUBMISSION The conference accepts papers in English. Papers (5 formatted pages in the conference format) are due by September 4, 2013
(midnight, any time zone) and should not disclose the author(s) in any manner. In order to facilitate submission we have
decided to reduce the formatting requirements as much as possible at this stage. Please, have a look at www.ltc.amu.edu.pl
(Paper Submission section). All submissions are to be made electronically via the LTC 2013 web submission system (EasyChair). Acceptance/rejection notification will be sent by September 25, 2013. The Word template (ELRA/LREC based format) is available from http://www.ltc.amu.edu.pl (Paper Submission section). PUBLICATION POLICY Acceptance will be based on the reviewers' assessments (anonymous submission model). The accepted papers will be published in the conference proceedings (hard copy, with ISBN number) and on CD-ROM. The abstracts of the accepted contributions will also be made available via the conference page (during its lifetime). Publication requires full electronic registration and payment of the conference fee (full registration) by at least one of the co-authors before October 23, 2013. A post-conference volume with extended versions of selected papers is planned to be published. As this was the case for the
last three conferences, we intend to publish them in the Springer series Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence. IMPORTANT DATES/DEADLINES * Deadline for submission of papers for review: September 4, 2013 * Acceptance/Rejection notification: September 25, 2013 * Deadline for submission of final versions of accepted papers: October 9, 2013 * Conference: December 7-9, 2013 REGISTRATION Only electronic registration will be possible. Details will be published at www.ltc.amu.edu.pl. AWARDS FOR BEST STUDENT PAPERS As at the 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th Language and Technology Conferences (2005, 2007, 2009, 2011) special awards will be
granted to the best student papers. The regular or PhD students (on the date of paper submission) are concerned. More
details at www.ltc.amu.edu.pl. OTHER Much more important information is or will be provided at the conference site www.ltc.amu.edu.pl. Please check this site from
time to time and do not hesitate to ask questions through ltc13@amu.edu.pl. Zygmunt Vetulani and Hans Uszkoreit LTC 2013 Co-Chairs
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3-3-11 | (2013-12-08) 2013 IEEE Automatic Speech Recognition and Understanding (ASRU)-Olomouc, Czech Republic 2013 IEEE Automatic Speech Recognition and Understanding (ASRU)
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3-3-12 | (2013-12-08) 3rd LTC Workshop on 'Less Resourced Languages, new technologies, new challenges and opportunities', in conjunction with the Language Technology Conference in Poznan, Poland The third LTC Workshop on 'Less Resourced Languages, new technologies, new --
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3-3-13 | (2014) Speech Prosody 2014 in Dublin. Speech Prosody 2014 in Dublin.
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3-3-14 | (2014-01-18) 5th International Workshop on Spoken Dialog Systems (IWSDS 2014), Napa, CA, USA 5th International Workshop on Spoken Dialog Systems (IWSDS 2014)
Situated Dialog
Napa, California, US, January 18-20, 2014
** ANNOUNCEMENT **
Following the success of IWSDS-2009 (Irsee, Germany), IWSDS-2010 (Gotemba Kogen Resort, Japan), IWSDS-2011 (Granada, Spain), and IWSDS-2012, (Paris, France), the Fifth International Workshop on Spoken Dialog Systems (IWSDS-2014) will be held in Napa, California, US on January 18-20, 2014.
The IWSDS Workshop series provides an international forum for the presentation of research and applications and for lively discussions among researchers as well as industrialists, with a special interest to the practical implementation of Spoken Dialog Systems in everyday applications.
To date many dialog systems have been developed for well-defined domains most notably information access and simple transactions. As spoken language technologies become more sophisticated more diverse domains have begun to be explored. One direction has been towards systems that are untethered and that do not rely on a clearly demarcated domain. More recently, researchers have begun to explore systems for domains that require a clear awareness of dynamic context and surroundings, also known as situated dialog systems. Such domains include robotic and automotive systems, but also systems found in mobile devices and in the cloud.
Situated dialog represents the next step in creating spoken language systems that can be used by humans as a part of everyday life but it presents new research challenges. For example perception becomes significantly more important as the current state of the world plays a role in the interaction; moreover situated dialog often requires more advanced reasoning capabilities than non-situated systems. Humans might also expect systems to understand and retain new information and be able to accept relatively complex direction. Many of these systems are used in hands-busy eyes-busy situations, where spoken language becomes the principal means of communication.
Areas of research that touch on Situated Dialog: * Auditory scene analysis and interpretation * Acquisition and tracking of dialog channels * Explicit and implicit grounding * Out-of-Vocabulary inputs and their resolution * Advanced conversational capabilities: Initiation and termination * Managing multi-party dialogs * Multi-modal interaction (gesture and gaze) * Language-based learning and instruction * Dialog interaction for robotic systems or kiosks * Interfaces to automotive systems * Spoken language for mobile applications
Research and development in the following areas are relevant to this meeting; we also invite the submission of original papers in any related area:
* Speech recognition and understanding, Dialog management, Adaptive * Dialog modeling, Recognition of emotions from speech, gestures, * Facial expressions and physiological data, Emotional and * Interactional dynamic profile of the speaker during dialog, User * Modeling, Planning and reasoning capabilities for coordination and * Conflict description, Conflict resolution in complex multi-level * Decisions, Multi-modality such as graphics, gesture and speech for * Input and output, Fusion, fission and information management, * Learning and adaptability, Visual processing and recognition for * Advanced human-computer interaction, Spoken Dialog databases and * Corpora, including methodologies and ethics, Objective and * Subjective Spoken Dialog evaluation methodologies, strategies and * Paradigms, Spoken Dialog prototypes and products, etc.
PAPER SUBMISSION
We particularly welcome papers that can be illustrated by a demonstration, and we will organize the conference in order to best accommodate these papers, whatever their category. As usual, it is planned that a selection of accepted papers will be published in a book by Springer following the conference. We distinguish between the following categories of submissions:
* Long Research Papers are reserved for reports on mature research results. The expected length of a long paper should be in the range of 6-10 pages, not including references.
* Short Research Papers should not exceed 6 pages in total. Authors may choose this category if they wish to report on smaller case studies or ongoing but interesting and original research.
* Demo - System Papers: Authors who wish to demonstrate their system may choose this category and provide a description of their system and demo. System papers should not exceed 6 pages in total.
IMPORTANT DATES: October 13, 2013 (23:59 GMT) Deadline for submission November 18, 2013: Author notification December 2, 2013: Deadline for final submission of accepted paper December 23, 2013: Final Program available online January 18-20, 2014 Workshop
VENUE: IWSDS 2014 will be held as a two-day residential seminar at The Carneros Inn in Napa, USA, where attendees will be accommodated. January 20th will be devoted to visits at laboratories in the Bay Area's Silicon Valley.
IWSDS Steering Committee: Gary Geunbae Lee (POSTECH, Pohang, Korea), Ramón López-Cózar (Univ. of Granada, Spain), Joseph Mariani (LIMSI and IMMI-CNRS, Orsay, France), Wolfgang Minker (Ulm Univ., Germany), Satoshi Nakamura (Nara Institute of Science and Technology, Japan)
Organizing Committee: Alexander Rudnicky (CMU) (Chair), Ian Lane (CMU), Antoine Raux (Lenovo), Teruhisa Misu (HRI USA)
Scientific Committee: Jan Alexandersson - DFKI, Germany; Masahiro Araki - Kyoto Institute of Technology, Japan; André Berton - Daimler, Germany; Dan Bohus - Microsoft, USA; Axel Buendia - SpirOps, France; Susan Burger - CMU, USA; Felix Burkhard - Deutsche Telekom Lab., Germany ; oraida Callejas - Univ. Granada, Spain; Heriberto Cuayahuitl - DFKI, Germany; Yannick Estève - LIUM, France; Sadaoki Furui - Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan; David Griol - Univ. Carlos III de Madrid, Spain; Joakim Gustafson - KTH, Sweden; Olivier Hamon - ELDA, France; Paul Heisterkamp - Daimler, Germany; Dirk Heylen - Univ. Twente, The Netherlands; Ryuichiro Higashinaka - NTT, Japan; Julia Hirshberg - Columbia Univ., USA; Kristiina Jokinen - Helsinki Univ., Finland; Tatsuya Kawahara - Kyoto Univ., Japan; Harksoo Kim - Kangwon National University, Korea ;Hong Kook Kim - Gwangju Inst. of Science and Technology, Korea; Seokhwan Kim - Institute for Infocomm Research, Singapore; Kazunori Komatani - Nagoya Univ, Japan; Fabrice Lefèvre - LIA, France; Haizhou Li - Institute for Infocomm Research, Singapore; Matthew Marge - CMU, USA; Michael McTear - Univ. Ulster, UK; Yasuhiro Minami - NTT, Japan; Teruhisa Misu - HRI, USA; Mikio Nakano - Honda Resaerch Institute, Japan; Shrikanth S. Narayanan - SAIL, USA; Elmar Nöeth - Univ. Erlangen, Germany; Roberto Pieraccini - ICSI - Berkeley, USA; Olivier Pietquin - Sup'Elec, France; Norbert Reithinger - DFKI, Germany; Björn Schuller - Technische Universitaet Muenchen, Germany; Lizbeth Shriberg - ICSI, SRI and Microsoft, USA; Gabriel Skantze - KTH, Sweden; Sebastian Stüker - KIT, Germany; Kazuya Takeda - Nagoya Univ., Japan; Stefanie Tellex - Brown U., USA; David Traum - USC, USA; Hsin-min Wang - Academia Sinica, Taiwan; Nigel Ward - UTEP, USA; Jason Williams - Microsoft, USA
Supporting organization: SIGdial
** Please contact air@cs.cmu.edu or visit www.iwsds.org for more information. **
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3-3-15 | (2014-01-22) AISV 2014 X Convegno Nazionale dell'Associazione Italiana di Scienze della VoceX Convegno Nazionale dell'Associazione Italiana di Scienze della VoceUniversità degli Studi di Torino22-24 gennaio 2014The conference will take place at the Department of Foreign Languages of the University of Turin, via Verdi, 10. Contact: aisv2014@gmail.com
gemellato con l'evento Conferenza TAL 2014 Organizzato da Associazione Italiana di Scienze della VoceLFSAGUniversità degli Studi di Torino
Besides the topics which are usually discussed in the AISV workshops you are invited to submit abstracts in the following fields:
Abstract Submission
Your abstract must be formatted in PDF format and composed of about 2000 words (or 10000 characters, included spaces). The deadline for the abstracts' submission is scheduled for October 14, 2013. There is no template for the abstract. Contributions should be in anonymous form avoiding citations and minimizing those elements that would allow reviewers to determine the identity of the authors. For this purpose we invite you NOT to put the bibliography in the abstract (which will be inserted in the final paper). Abstracts containing cues about their authors will be anonymized by a member of the organizing committee.
Send the abstract in attachment to an e-mail addressed to aisv2014@gmail.com Please state in the body of the message the following data:
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3-3-16 | (2014-02-23) CfP MMEDIA 2014, The Sixth International Conferences on Advances in Multimedia, Nice ,FMMEDIA 2014, The Sixth International Conferences on Advances in Multimedia February 23 - 27, 2014 - Nice, France General page: http://www.iaria.org/conferences2014/MMEDIA14.html Call for Papers: http://www.iaria.org/conferences2014/CfPMMEDIA14.html - regular papers - short papers (work in progress) - posters Submission page: http://www.iaria.org/conferences2014/SubmitMMEDIA14.html Submission deadline: October 12, 2013 Sponsored by IARIA, www.iaria.org Extended versions of selected papers will be published in IARIA Journals: http://www.iariajournals.org Print proceedings will be available via Curran Associates, Inc.: http://www.proceedings.com/9769.html Articles will be archived in the free access ThinkMind Digital Library: http://www.thinkmind.org Please note the Poster and Work in Progress options. The topics suggested by the conference can be discussed in term of concepts, state of the art, research, standards, implementations, running experiments, applications, and industrial case studies. Authors are invited to submit complete unpublished papers, which are not under review in any other conference or journal in the following, but not limited to, topic areas. All tracks are open to both research and industry contributions, in terms of Regular papers, Posters, Work in progress, Technical/marketing/business presentations, Demos, Tutorials, and Panels. Before submission, please check and comply with the editorial rules: http://www.iaria.org/editorialrules.html MMEDIA 2014 Topics (topics and submission details: see CfP on the site) Fundamentals in multimedia Multimedia systems, architecture, and applications; New multimedia platforms; Multimedia architectural specification languages; Theoretical aspects and algorithms for multimedia; Multimedia content delivery networks; Network support for multimedia data; Multimedia data storage; Multimedia meta-modeling techniques and operating systems; Multimedia signal coding and processing (audio, video, image); Multimedia applications (telepresence, triple-play, quadruple-play, …); Multimedia tools (authoring, analyzing, editing, browsing, …); Computational multimedia intelligence (fuzzy logic, neural networks, genetic algorithms, …); Intelligent agents for multimedia content creation, distribution, and analysis; Multimedia networking; Wired and wireless multimedia systems; Distributed multimedia systems; Multisensor data integration and fusion; Multimedia and P2P; Multimedia standards Multimedia content and modeling Interfaces for multimedia creation; Multimedia streaming and services; Image modeling and editing; Audio modeling and transformation; Video modeling and transformation; Image recognition; Multimedia databases; Multimedia coding and encryption; Multimedia modeling for learning content; Multimedia description languages; Image clustering; Media fusion for communication and presentation Self-organizing multimedia architectures Self-organization in multimedia systems; Self-organization in multimedia communities; Self-organized multimedia networks; Multimedia content distribution and consumption; Adaptive multimedia interfaces; Multimedia retrieval Multimedia content-based retrieval and analysis Multimodal data analysis; Multimedia databases; Semi-automatic and automatic methods for multimedia annotation; Image/video/audio databases; Content-based image retrieval; Semantics-based search and integration of multimedia and digital content; Multimedia data modeling, indexing, and mining; Statistical modeling of multimedia data; Multimedia extraction and annotation; Content search/browsing/retrieval; Internet imaging and multimedia; Multimodal content analysis; Multimedia abstraction and summarization; Semantic analysis of multimedia data; Media assimilation and fusion Perception and cognition for multimedia users Quality of experience; Relevance feedback; Human-computer interaction; Multimodal interaction; Multimodal user interfaces; Mobile user-centered interfaces; Peer-to-peer multimedia systems and streaming; Pervasive and interactive multimedia systems (digital TV, mobile systems, gaming,…); Multimedia in personal, sensor and ad-hoc networks; Visualization and virtual reality; Intelligent browsing and visualization; Perception and cognition; Perception and modeling of the environment; Multimedia collaboration; Social networking Multimedia ontology Multimedia semantics; Emergent semantics; Media ontology learning; Ontology for media web mining; Multimedia ontologies; Multimedia information management; Approaches using metadata standards; Conceptual clustering; Modeling and recognition of visual objects and actions Mobile and ubiquitous multimedia Architectures, protocols, and algorithms for multimedia mobility; Middleware and distributed computing support for mobile and ubiquitous multimedia; Mobile and ubiquitous multimedia in intelligent transportation systems; Enabling platforms for mobile multimedia; Roaming and limited bandwidth; Intermittent connectivity; Streaming mobile multimedia; Mobile multimedia software architectures; Mobile multimedia applications and services; Communication and cooperation via mobile multimedia; Business models for mobile multimedia; Provisioning of mobile multimedia services; Context-aware mobile and ubiquitous multimedia; Mobile computer graphics, games and entertainment; Mobile and ubiquitous multimedia in ad hoc networks; Personalization, privacy and security in mobile multimedia; Social and regulatory aspects of mobile multimedia; Multimedia in the Extended Home; Ubiquitous/Seamless content sharing Multimedia services Reliability, availability, serviceability of multimedia services; Multimedia content distribution services; Real-time multimedia services; Audio-visual multimedia services; Multimedia signal processing and communications; Media representation and algorithms; Audio, image, video processing, coding and compression; Multimedia database, content delivery and transport; Multimedia service protocols; Mobility of multimedia services; Internet telephony and hypermedia technologies and systems; Media enabled eCommerce service; Case studies, field trials and evaluation of new multimedia services Multimedia applications Real-time interactive multimedia applications Adaptive and context-aware multimedia applications; Ambiance multimedia applications; Media applications on mobile devices; Multi-modal interaction; Virtual environments; Personalization; Collaboration, contextual metadata, collaborative tagging; Web applications; Multimedia authoring; Multimedia-enabled new applications (eLearning, entertainment,…..); Cooperative networks and applications; Mobile multimedia applications & services; Semantic metadata for mobile applications; Semantics enabled multimedia applications; Semantics enabled networks and middleware for multimedia applications; Wireless ad-hoc and sensor networks/RFID applications Industrial use-cases and applications Multimedia security and content protection Multimedia security (watermark, encryption,… ); Mobile multimedia systems and services; Security, privacy, and cryptographic protocols; Network security issues and protocols; Key management and authentication; Authentication and access control; Intrusion detection and prevention; Content protection and digital rights management; Trusted computing; Information hiding; Protection of user-generated content Multimedia control and management Wireless and mobile multimedia network management; Multimedia measurement, control, and management; Content management and delivery; IP multimedia system operations and management; Managing the quality of experience and quality of service; Measuring the quality of performance in multimedia systems; Mobile multimedia network traffic engineering and optimization; Monitoring and managing mobile multimedia; Resource reservation for multimedia services; Multicast and broadcast multimedia service management; Management of service oriented architectures; Pricing, accounting and billing for multimedia services ----------------------- Committee: http://www.iaria.org/conferences2014/ComMMEDIA14.html
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3-3-17 | (2014-03-03) CfP International Conference on Bio-inspired Systems and Signal Processing BIOSIGNALS CALL FOR PAPERS International Conference on Bio-inspired Systems and Signal Processing BIOSIGNALS website: http://www.biosignals.biostec.org/ March 3 - 6, 2014 Angers, Loire Valley, France Technical Co-sponsorship by: ESEM In Cooperation with: AAAI and EUROMICRO Co-organized by: ESEO Sponsored by: INSTICC INSTICC is Member of: WfMC, OMG and FIPA Logistics Partner: SCIT EVENTS IMPORTANT DATES: Regular Paper Submission: September 19, 2013 Authors Notification (regular papers): December 6, 2013 Final Regular Paper Submission and Registration: December 20, 2013 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Let me kindly inform you that the International Conference on Bio-inspired Systems and Signal Processing (BIOSIGNALS 2014 - http://www.biosignals.biostec.org/) steering committee cordially invites you to submit a paper to the BIOSIGNALS 2014 Conference, to be held in Angers, France. The deadline for paper submission is scheduled for September 19, 2013.The purpose of the International Conference on Bio-inspired Systems and Signal Processing is to bring together researchers and practitioners from multiple areas of knowledge, including biology, medicine, engineering and other physical sciences, interested in studying and using models and techniques inspired from or applied to biological systems. A diversity of signal types can be found in this area, including image, audio and other biological sources of information. The analysis and use of these signals is a multidisciplinary area including signal processing, pattern recognition and computational intelligence techniques, amongst others. BIOSIGNALS is interested in promoting high quality research as it can be confirmed by last year acceptance rates, where from 113 submissions, 13% were accepted as full papers. Additionally, 24% were presented as short papers and 27% as posters.Submitted papers will be subject to a double-blind review process. All accepted papers will be published in the conference proceedings, under an ISBN reference, on paper and on CD-ROM support.A short list of presented papers will be selected so that revised and extended versions of these papers will be published by Springer-Verlag in a CCIS Series book.The proceedings will be submitted for indexation by Thomson Reuters Conference Proceedings Citation Index (ISI), INSPEC, DBLP and EI (Elsevier Index).All papers presented at the conference venue will be available at the SCITEPRESS Digital Library (http://www.scitepress.org/DigitalLibrary/). SCITEPRESS is member of CrossRef (http://www.crossref.org/).Best paper awards will be distributed during the conference closing session. Please check the website for further information (http://www.biosignals.biostec.org/BestPaperAward.aspx). Workshops, Special sessions, Tutorials as well as Demonstrations dedicated to other technical/scientific topics are also envisaged: companies interested in presenting their products/methodologies or researchers interested in holding a tutorial are invited to contact the conference secretariat. Workshop chairs and Special Session chairs will benefit from logistics support and other types of support, including secretariat and financial support, to facilitate the development of a valid idea. This conference is part of the 7th International Joint Conference on Biomedical Engineering Systems and Technologies - BIOSTEC (http://www.biostec.org/) and it is co-located with four related conference, namely:- BIODEVICES - International Conference on Biomedical Electronics and Devices (http://www.biodevices.biostec.org/)- BIOIMAGING - International Conference on Bioimaging (http://www.bioimaging.biostec.org/)- BIOINFORMATICS - International Conference on Bioinformatics Models, Methods and Algorithms (http://www.bioinformatics.biostec.org/)- HEALTHINF - International Conference on Health Informatics (http://www.healthinf.biostec.org/) Registration to one conference allows free access to all other BIOSTEC conferences.We would like to highlight the Doctoral Consortium on Biomedical Engineering Systems and Technologies that will take place in conjunction with BIOSTEC and aims to provide an opportunity for graduate students to explore their research interests in an interdisciplinary workshop, under the guidance of a panel of distinguished experts in the field (http://www.biostec.org/DoctoralConsortium.aspx). We hope to welcome you in Angers, France next March, 2014! Should you have any question please don't hesitate contacting me. Kind regards,Vera Coelho BIOSIGNALS SecretariatAv. D. Manuel I, 27A 2.Esq.2910-595 Setubal, PortugalTel.: +351 265 100 033 Fax: +44 203 014 8813Email: biosignals.secretariat@insticc.org - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - BIOSTEC Conference Co-chairs Guy Plantier, ESEO, GSII, France Tanja Schultz, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany Ana Fred, Technical University of Lisbon / IT, Portugal Hugo Gamboa, CEFITEC / FCT - New University of Lisbon, Portugal PROGRAM CHAIR:Harald Loose, Brandenburg University of Applied Sciences, Germany PROGRAM COMMITTEE:Please check the program committee members at http://www.biosignals.biostec.org/ProgramCommittee.aspx CONFERENCE TOPICS:- Speech Recognition- Neural Networks- Biometrics- Pattern Recognition- Medical Signal Acquisition, Analysis and Processing- Wearable Sensors and Systems- Real-Time Systems- Evolutionary Systems- Acoustic Signal Processing- Time and Frequency Response- Wavelet Transform- Medical Image Detection, Acquisition, Analysis and Processing- Physiological Processes and Bio-signal Modeling, Non-linear dynamics- Cybernetics and User Interface Technologies- Electromagnetic fields in biology and medicine- Fuzzy Systems and Signals- Monitoring and Telemetry- Cardiovascular Signals- Image Analysis and Processing- Detection and Identification- Motion Control
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3-3-18 | (2014-03-10) 8th INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON LANGUAGE AND AUTOMATA THEORY ANDAPPLICATIONS(LATA2014), Madrid, Spain8th INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON LANGUAGE AND AUTOMATA THEORY AND APPLICATIONS LATA 2014 Madrid, Spain March 10-14, 2014 Organized by: Research Group on Implementation of Language-Driven Software and Applications (ILSA) Complutense University of Madrid Research Group on Mathematical Linguistics (GRLMC) Rovira i Virgili University http://grammars.grlmc.com/lata2014/ ********************************************************************* AIMS: LATA is a yearly conference on theoretical computer science and its applications. Following the tradition of the diverse PhD training events in the field developed at Rovira i Virgili University in Tarragona since 2002, LATA 2014 will reserve significant room for young scholars at the beginning of their career. It will aim at attracting contributions from both classical theory fields and application areas (bioinformatics, language technology, artificial intelligence, etc.). VENUE: LATA 2014 will take place in Madrid, the capital of Spain. The venue will be the School of Informatics of Complutense University. SCOPE: Topics of either theoretical or applied interest include, but are not limited to: algebraic language theory algorithms for semi-structured data mining algorithms on automata and words automata and logic automata for system analysis and programme verification automata, concurrency and Petri nets automatic structures cellular automata codes combinatorics on words compilers computability computational complexity data and image compression decidability issues on words and languages descriptional complexity DNA and other models of bio-inspired computing digital libraries and document engineering foundations of finite state technology foundations of XML fuzzy and rough languages grammars (Chomsky hierarchy, contextual, unification, categorial, etc.) grammatical inference and algorithmic learning graphs and graph transformation language varieties and semigroups language-based cryptography language-theoretic foundations of artificial intelligence and artificial life natural language and speech automatic processing parallel and regulated rewriting parsing patterns power series quantum, chemical and optical computing semantics string and combinatorial issues in computational biology and bioinformatics string processing algorithms symbolic dynamics symbolic neural networks term rewriting transducers trees, tree languages and tree automata weighted automata STRUCTURE: LATA 2014 will consist of: invited talks invited tutorials peer-reviewed contributions INVITED SPEAKERS: to be announced PROGRAMME COMMITTEE: Dana Angluin (Yale, US) Eugene Asarin (Paris Diderot, FR) Jos Baeten (Amsterdam, NL) Christel Baier (Dresden, DE) Jan Bergstra (Amsterdam, NL) Jin-Yi Cai (Madison, US) Marek Chrobak (Riverside, US) Andrea Corradini (Pisa, IT) Mariangiola Dezani (Turin, IT) Ding-Zhu Du (Dallas, US) Michael R. Fellows (Darwin, AU) Jörg Flum (Freiburg, DE) Nissim Francez (Technion, IL) Jürgen Giesl (Aachen, DE) Annegret Habel (Oldenburg, DE) Kazuo Iwama (Kyoto, JP) Sampath Kannan (Philadelphia, US) Ming-Yang Kao (Northwestern, US) Deepak Kapur (Albuquerque, US) Joost-Pieter Katoen (Aachen, DE) S. Rao Kosaraju (Johns Hopkins, US) Evangelos Kranakis (Carleton, CA) Gad M. Landau (Haifa, IL) Andrzej Lingas (Lund, SE) Jack Lutz (Iowa State, US) Ian Mackie (École Polytechnique, FR) Carlos Martín-Vide (Tarragona, ES, chair) Giancarlo Mauri (Milan, IT) Faron G. Moller (Swansea, UK) Paliath Narendran (Albany, US) Enno Ohlebusch (Ulm, DE) Helmut Prodinger (Stellenbosch, ZA) Jean-François Raskin (Brussels, BE) Wolfgang Reisig (Humboldt Berlin, DE) Marco Roveri (Bruno Kessler, Trento, IT) Michaël Rusinowitch (LORIA, Nancy, FR) Yasubumi Sakakibara (Keio, JP) Davide Sangiorgi (Bologna, IT) Colin Stirling (Edinburgh, UK) Jianwen Su (Santa Barbara, US) Jean-Pierre Talpin (IRISA, Rennes, FR) Andrzej Tarlecki (Warsaw, PL) Rick Thomas (Leicester, UK) Sophie Tison (Lille, FR) Rob van Glabbeek (NICTA, Sydney, AU) Helmut Veith (Vienna Tech, AT) ORGANIZING COMMITTEE: Adrian Horia Dediu (Tarragona) Ana Fernández-Pampillón (Madrid) Carlos Martín-Vide (Tarragona, co-chair) Antonio Sarasa (Madrid) José-Luis Sierra (Madrid, co-chair) Bianca Truthe (Magdeburg) Florentina Lilica Voicu (Tarragona) 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) and should be formatted 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://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=lata2014 PUBLICATIONS: A volume of proceedings published by Springer in the LNCS series will be available by the time of the conference. A special issue of a major journal will be later published containing peer-reviewed extended versions of some of the papers contributed to the conference. Submissions to it will be by invitation. REGISTRATION: The period for registration is open from July 15, 2013 to March 10, 2014. The registration form can be found at: http://grammars.grlmc.com/lata2014/Registration.php DEADLINES: Paper submission: October 14, 2013 (23:59 CET) Notification of paper acceptance or rejection: November 25, 2013 Final version of the paper for the LNCS proceedings: December 2, 2013 Early registration: December 9, 2013 Late registration: February 24, 2014 Starting of the conference: March 10, 2014 End of the conference: March 14, 2014 Submission to the post-conference journal special issue: June 14, 2014 QUESTIONS AND FURTHER INFORMATION: florentinalilica.voicu@urv.cat POSTAL ADDRESS: LATA 2014 Research Group on Mathematical Linguistics (GRLMC) Rovira i Virgili University Av. Catalunya, 35 43002 Tarragona, Spain Phone: +34-977-559543 Fax: +34-977-558386 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS: Departament d’Economia i Coneixement, Generalitat de Catalunya Universidad Complutense de Madrid Universitat Rovira i Virgili
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3-3-19 | (2014-04-03) Workshop on Late Stages in Speech and Communication Development (LSCD 2014), UCL, London, GB Workshop title: Workshop on Late Stages in Speech and Communication Development (LSCD 2014)
Dates: 3-4 April 2014 Location: UCL, London, UK Meeting website: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/psychlangsci/research/speech/lscd-2014 Contact email: lscd-2014@langsci.ucl.ac.uk Submission deadline: 6 January 2014
Workshop description: Much emphasis in research on speech and communication development has been on the rapid developments that occur in the first five years of life. However, less attention has been given to later stages of development. When, in fact, is development truly complete? Research has shown that even when a child is judged to be consistently producing all speech sounds, production is not adult-like, with more dispersed and variable phoneme categories and motor gestures. Similarly, in speech perception, phoneme categories are less clearly defined until early teens and children are more affected by noise and reverberation. Cognitive, attentional and memory factors may also influence children's ability to use speech effectively; communicative and conversational strategies (such as repair and turn-taking) continue to develop in adolescence. The age at which a given linguistic unit or communicative competence has been acquired and what constitutes the criterion for successful acquisition is therefore a far from trivial question. This will be a particular focus of the workshop, along with the interplay between speech development and cognitive, perceptual and motor systems. The workshop will provide an opportunity for interactions between researchers from areas of developmental research that rarely meet, even though they are linked: speech and communication is often investigated either from a purely phonetic/phonological perspective, or focused on interactional/pragmatic principles. The manner in which the two interact through development is little explored. These questions are relevant for clinical and educational practice, and also inform theories of language processing and levels of representations.
Invited speakers include: Sarah-Jayne Blakemore (UCL) tbc Melissa Redford (University of Oregon) Stuart Rosen (UCL) Jack Sidnell (University of Toronto) Bill Wells (University of Sheffield) Natalia Zharkova (Queen Margaret University)
Call for papers: We invite submissions, for oral and poster presentations, that deal with the following topics focusing on populations aged 5 years to early adulthood: - Later developments in speech perception in typically-developing children - Later developments in speech production in typically-developing children - Development in discourse: structure, repair strategies, dysfluencies - Speech and communication development in bilinguals and second-language learners - Development in auditory, cognitive, attentional skills and impact on speech and communication development - Development of sociolinguistic variations - Perception and production in adverse listening conditions - Research on speech and communication development in atypical populations that informs on typical development
Abstracts (in English) should be submitted by 6 January, 2014, via Easychair (submission site open from 15 November). Submitted abstracts should not include authors and affiliations and must not be longer than two pages of A4-format. References and figures can be on an additional page. Abstracts should be single-spaced and in Calibri 11pt font. Abstracts will be evaluated anonymously by two reviewers. Authors will be requested to submit a final version of the extended abstract after acceptance.
Important dates: First call for papers 1 October 2013 Abstract submission opens 15 November 2013 Submission deadline of abstracts 6 January 2014 Notification of acceptance 31 January 2014 Workshop 3-4 April 2014
Local Organising committee: Sonia Granlund Lorna Halliday Valerie Hazan (Chair) Merle Mahon Caroline Newton Michèle Pettinato Outi Tuomainen
The workshop is organised under the aegis of the ESRC project on Speaker-controlled Variability in Children's Speech in Interaction based at UCL.
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3-3-20 | (2014-05-04) ICASSP 2014, Florence, Italy ICASSP 2014
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3-3-21 | (2014-05-05) 10th International Seminar on Speech Production – ISSP 2014 Cologne Germany MODIFIED10th International Seminar on Speech Production – ISSP 2014We are pleased to announce the 10th International Speech Production Seminar, which will take place in Cologne from 5th to 8th May 2014. This international meeting was launched in 1988 in Grenoble, 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. At this meeting we shall be celebrating the tenth anniversary of this series.
Topics of interest for ISSP 2014 include, but are not restricted to, the following:
Invited speakers: Christian Kell (Brain Imaging Center, Frankfurt, Germany) Oscillatory signatures of speech preparation and production D. Robert Ladd (University of Edinburgh, UK) (title to be announced) Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel (MIT, USA) The role of prosody in speech production planning Michael J. Richardson (University of Cincinnati, USA) Behavioural dynamics of social coordination and speech production Caroline Palmer (McGill University, CA) Auditory-motor integration in ensemble music performance Further information is provided here: http://www.issp2014.uni-koeln.de/
To contact the organizers, please send an email to:
Important dates: 1st October 2013: Two page paper submission 15th December 2013: Notification of acceptance 15th January 2014: Online registration open 25th February 2014: Revised version of four page paper 15th March: Deadline for early bird registration 5th May - 8th May 2014 : ISSP 2014
The organizers: Susanne Fuchs, Martine Grice, Anne Hermes, Leonardo Lancia, Doris Muecke
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3-3-22 | (2014-05-12) 4th Joint Workshop on Hands-Free Speech Communication and Microphone Arrays (HSCMA 2014), Nancy France 4th Joint Workshop on Hands-Free Speech Communication
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3-3-23 | (2014-05-14) SLTU-2014 WORKSHOP - ANNOUNCEMENT AND CALL FOR PAPERS, St Petersburg, Russia SLTU-2014 WORKSHOP - ANNOUNCEMENT AND CALL FOR PAPERS
4th International Workshop on Spoken Language Technologies for Under-Resourced Languages (SLTU'14) 14-16 May 2014 St. Petersburg, Russia www.mica.edu.vn/sltu2014
Organized by St. Petersburg Institute for Informatics and Automation of the Russian Academy of Sciences (SPIIRAS) in cooperation with LIG (France), LIA (France), and MICA (Vietnam).
The Workshop on Spoken Language Technologies for Under-Resourced Languages is the fourth in a series of even-year SLTU Workshops. Three previous Workshops were organized: SLTU’12 in Cape Town (South Africa), SLTU’10 in Penang (Malaysia), and SLTU’08 in Hanoi (Vietnam). SLTU’14 International Workshop is held in St. Petersburg (Russian Federation) and has the special focus on Eastern European under-resourced languages (Slavic, Baltic, Uralic, Altaic, Caucasian, etc.).
SLTU'14 Workshop topics include all areas related to processing under-resourced and endangered languages: - Language resources development, acquisition, and representation: dictionary, language model, grammars, text and speech corpora, etc. - Automatic speech recognition and synthesis of low-resourced Languages and dialects, etc. - Multi-lingual spoken language processing including analysis and synthesis. - Machine translation and spoken dialogue systems.
** Scientific Committee: Etienne Barnard, NWU, South Africa Laurent Besacier, LIG, France Eric Castelli, MICA, Vietnam Dirk Van Compernolle, UCL, Belgium Marelie Davel, NWU, South Africa Alexey Karpov, SPIIRAS, Russia Daniil Kocharov, SPbSU, Russia Lori Lamel, LIMSI, France Haizhou Li, A-star, Singapore Roger K. Moore, Sheffield, UK Pedro Moreno, Google, USA Satoshi Nakamura, NAIST, Japan Pascal Nocera, LIA, France Francois Pellegrino, Lyon, France Andrey Ronzhin, SPIIRAS, Russia Yoshinori Sagisaka, Waseda, Japan Ruhi Sarikaya, Microsoft, USA Tanja Schultz, Karlsruhe, Germany Pavel Skrelin, SPbSU, Russia Tan Tien Ping, USM, Malaysia
** Important Dates: - Paper submission: 10 January, 2014 - Update of full paper: 31 January, 2014 - Notification of acceptance: 03 March, 2014 - Submission of final papers: 17 March, 2014 - Registration due: 17 March, 2014 - Workshop dates: 14-16 May, 2014 Independently of the scientific actions we will provide excellent possibilities for acquaintance with cultural and historical valuables of St. Petersburg city and its beautiful surroundings.
SLTU'14 Workshop Chairs: Alexey Karpov (SPIIRAS, Russia) Laurent Besacier (LIG, France) Pascal Nocera (LIA, France) Eric Castelli (MICA, Vietnam)
For the latest information, please check the conference web page: www.mica.edu.vn/sltu2014
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3-3-24 | (2014-05-20) The 7th Speech Prosody Conference, Dublin, Ireland The 7th Speech Prosody Conference will be held in Dublin, Ireland, May 20-23, 2014, at Trinity College Dublin, directly preceding LREC, the Linguistic Resources and Evaluation Conference. Topics of interest include: communicative situation and speaking style, dynamics of register and style, l2 prosody, phonology and phonetics of prosody, pitch accent, prosody and spoken language systems, prosody and the sounds of language, prosody development in first language acquisition, prosody for forensic applications, prosody in face-to-face interaction: audiovisual modeling and analysis, prosody in neurological disorders, prosody in speech synthesis, recognition and understanding; prosody models and theoretical issues, prosody of sign language, prosody of under-resourced languages and dialects; psycholinguistic, cognitive, and neural correlates of prosody; signal processing; voice quality, phonation, and vocal dynamics, and prosodic characteristics of individuals; and as special review areas, the prosody of nonverbal vocalisations, speech-gesture interaction, and joint/choral speech. More information is available at http://www.speechprosody2014.org/ .
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3-3-25 | (2014-05-26) ELRA-LREC Conference, Reykjavik (Iceland) ELRA and the LREC Programme Committee are very pleased to announce that the LREC 2012 Proceedings have been accepted for inclusion in the Conference Proceedings Citation Index of Thomson Reuters. The CPCI is searchable through the Web of Science platform and will provide authors with with unprecedented recognition. LREC 2010 proceedings are currently under review, and chances that they will be accepted are high! Once published, the proceedings of LREC 2014 will be submitted for inclusion in the CPCI.
ELRA is glad to announce the 9th edition of LREC, organised with the support of a wide range of international organisations.
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, on-going and planned activities, industrial uses and needs, requirements coming from e-science and e-society, with respect both to policy issues and to scientific/technological and organisational ones.
LREC provides a unique forum for researchers, industrials and funding agencies from across a wide spectrum of areas to discuss problems and opportunities, find new synergies and promote initiatives for international cooperation, in support of investigations in language sciences, progress in language technologies (LT) and development of corresponding products, services and applications, and standards.
CONFERENCE TOPICS
Issues in the design, construction and use of LRs: text, speech, multimodality * 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, etc. * Interfaces: (speech-based) dialogue systems, natural language and multimodal/multisensorial interactions, voice-activated services, etc. * Use of (multilingual) LRs in various fields of application like e-government, e-culture, e-health, e-participation, mobile applications, digital humanities, etc. * Industrial LRs requirements, user needs 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 collaboration * 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 * Organisational, economical, ethical and legal issues.
LREC 2014 HOT TOPICS
Big Data, Linked Open Data, LRs and HLT
The ever-increasing quantities of large and complex digital datasets, structured or unstructured, multilingual, multimodal or multimedia, pose new challenges but at the same time open up new opportunities for HLT and related fields. Ubiquitous data and information capturing devices, social media and networks, the web at large with its big data / knowledge bases and other information capturing / aggregating / publishing platforms are providing useful information and/or knowledge for a wide range of LT applications. LREC 2014 puts a strong emphasis on the synergies of the big Linked Open Data and LRs/LT communities and their complementarity in cracking LT problems and developing useful applications and services.
LRs in the Collaborative Age
The amount of collaboratively generated and used language data is constantly increasing and it is therefore time to open a wide discussion on such LRs at LREC. There is a need to discuss the types of LRs that can be collaboratively generated and used. Are lexicons, dictionaries, corpora, ontologies (of language data), grammars, tagsets, data categories, all possible fields in which a collaborative approach can be applied? Can collaboratively generated LRs be standardised/harmonised? And how can quality control be applied to collaboratively generated LRs? How can a collaborative approach ensure that less-resourced languages receive the same digital dignity as mainstream languages? There is also a need to discuss legal aspects related to collaboratively generated LRs. And last but not least: are there different types of collaborative approaches, or is the Wikimedia style the best approach to collaborative generation and use of LRs?
LREC 2014 SPECIAL HIGHLIGHT 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 2014 recognises that the time is ripe to launch another important initiative, the LREC Repository of shared LRs! 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 META-SHARE 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, may become a new 'regular' feature for conferences in our field, thus contributing 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.
SUBMISSIONS AND DATES Submission of proposals for oral and poster (or poster+demo) papers: 15 October 2013 Abstracts should consist of about 1500-2000 words, will be submitted through START @ https://www.softconf.com/lrec2014/main/ and will be peer-reviewed.
Submission of proposals for panels, workshops and tutorials: 15 October 2013 Proposals should be submitted via an online form on the LREC website (click Submission from the Home page) and will be reviewed by the Programme Committee.
PROCEEDINGS The Proceedings will include both oral and poster papers, in the same format.
There is 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.
In addition a Book of Abstracts will be printed.
CONFERENCE PROGRAMME COMMITTEE Nicoletta Calzolari – CNR, Istituto di Linguistica Computazionale “Antonio Zampolli”, Pisa - Italy (Conference chair) Khalid Choukri – ELRA, Paris - France Thierry Declerck – DFKI GmbH, Saarbrücken - Germany Hrafn Loftsson – School of Computer Science, Reykjavík University - Iceland Bente Maegaard – CST, University of Copenhagen - Denmark Joseph Mariani – LIMSI-CNRS & IMMI, 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
Follow LREC News on: www.lrec-conf.org/lrec2014 @LREC2014
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3-3-26 | (2014-06-11) 15th ICPLA Conference 2014
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3-3-27 | (2014-06-17) 10th Oxford Dysfluency Conference (ODC) at St Catherine's College Oxford , UK We are pleased to announce the 10th Oxford Dysfluency Conference (ODC) is to be held at St Catherine's College Oxford from 17 - 20 July, 2014. ODC has a reputation as one of the leading international scientific conferences in the field of dysfluency. The conference brings together researchers and clinicians, providing a showcase and forum for discussion and collegial debate about the most current and innovative research and clinical practices. Throughout the history of ODC, the primary aim has been to bridge the gap between research and clinical practice. The conference seeks to promote research that informs management, with interventions that are supported by sound theory and which inform future research. In 2014, the goal of the Oxford Dysfluency Conference is to lead a challenging international debate about the latest research in disorders of fluency and its clinical applications. The 2014 conference will enable delegates to:
Conference Co-Chairs David Rowley, Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, De Montfort University, UK
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3-3-28 | (2014-06-21) The REAL Challenge The REAL Challenge – Call for Participation
The Dialog Research Center at Carnegie Mellon (DialRC) is organizing the REAL Challenge. The goal of the REAL Challenge (dialrc.org/realchallenge) is to build speech systems that are used regularly by real users to accomplish real tasks. These systems will give the speech and spoken dialog communities steady streams of research data as well as platforms they can use to carry out studies. It will engage both seasoned researchers and high school and undergrad students in an effort to find the next great speech applications.
Why have a REAL Challenge? Humans greatly rely on spoken language to communicate, so it seems natural that we would be likely to communicate with objects via speech as well. Some speech interfaces do exist and they show promise, demonstrating that smart engineering can palliate indeterminate recognition. Yet the general public has not yet picked up this means of communication as easily as they have the tiny keyboards. About two decades ago, many researchers were using the internet, mostly to send and receive email. They were aware of the potential that it held and waited to see when and how the general public would adopt it. Practically a decade later, thanks to providers such as AmericaOnline, who had found how to create easy access, everyday people started to use the internet. And this has dramatically changed our lives. In the same way, we all know that speech will eventually replace the keyboard in many situations when we want to speak to objects. The big question is what is the interface or application that will bring us into that era.
Why hasn’t speech become a more prevalent interface? Most of today’s speech applications have been devised by researchers in the speech domain. While they certainly know what types of systems are “doable”, they may not be the best at determining which speech applications would be universally acceptable.
We believe that students who have not yet had their vision limited by knowledge of the speech and spoken dialog domains and who have grown up with computers as a given, are the ones that will find new, compelling and universally appealing speech applications. Along with the good ideas, they will need some guidance to gain focus. Having a mentor, attending webinars and participating in a research team can provide this guidance.
The REAL challenge will combine the talents of these two very different groups. First it will call upon the speech research community who know what it takes to implement real applications. Second, it will advertise to and encourage participation from high school students and college undergrads who love to hack and have novel ideas about using speech.
How can we combine these two types of talent? The REAL Challenge is starting with a widely-advertised call for proposals. Students can propose an application. Researchers can propose to create systems or to provide tools. A proposal can target any type of application in any language. The proposals will be lightly filtered and the successful proposers will be invited to a workshop on June 21, 2014 to show what they are proposing and to team up. The idea is for students to meet researchers and for the latter to take one or more students on their team. Students will present their ideas and have time for discussion with researchers. A year later, a second workshop will assemble all who were at the first workshop to show the resulting systems, measure success and award prizes. Student travel will be taken care of by DialRC through grants.
Preparing students Students will have help from DialRC and from researchers as they formulate their proposals. DialRC will provide webinars on such topics as speech processing tool basics and how to present a poster. Students will also be assigned mentors. Researchers in speech and spoken dialog can volunteer to be a one-on-one mentor to a student. This consists of being in touch either in person or virtually. Mentors can tell the students about what our field consists of, what the state of the art is, and what it is like to work in research. They can answer questions about how the student can talk about their ideas. If you are a researcher in speech and/or spoken dialog and you would like to be a mentor, please let us know at realchallenge@speechinfo.org
What is an entry? The groups will create entries. Here are the characteristics of a successful entry:
How can we assess success? Success will be judged on the basis of originality, amount of regular users and of data and on other criteria to be agreed upon by the Challenge scientific committee and the participants.
Possible prize areas for an entry include:
Details of the measures of success will be refined at the workshop with input from the participants.
Timeline The REAL Challenge was announced at several major conferences during the summer of 2013: SIGDIAL, Interspeech, ACL. It is also being announced to younger participants through their schools and hacker websites.
March 20, 2014 : Proposals due April 20, 2014: Feedback on proposals and invitations to attend the workshop sent out. June 21, 2014 : Workshop in Baltimore Maryland USA. Early summer of 2015 : Resulting systems are presented a year after the first workshop.
What advantage is there for a student to participate? For students, participation in the REAL Challenge will present several unique opportunities:
What does this Challenge contribute to the speech community? For researchers, participation reaps several benefits:
Why should industrial research groups be interested in the Challenge? Industrial research groups should be interested to see:
Organization This Challenge is run by the Dialog Research Center at Carnegie Mellon (DialRC)
REAL Challenge Scientific Committee
Alan W Black, Carnegie Mellon University, USA Maxine Eskenazi, Carnegie Mellon University, USA Helen Hastie, Heriot Watt University, Scotland Gary Geunbae Lee, Pohang University of Science and Technology, South Korea Sungjin Lee, Carnegie Mellon University, USA Santoshi Nakamura, Nara Institute of Science and Technology, Japan Elmar Noeth, Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany Antoine Raux, Lenovo, USA David Traum, University of Southern California, USA Jason Williams, Microsoft Research, USA
Contact information: Website : http://dialrc.org/realchallenge Email : realchallenge@speechinfo.org
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3-3-29 | (2014-07-01) 21st Conference on Natural Language Processing (TALN 2014), Marseille, F CALL FOR PAPERS
TALN-2014 21st Conference on Natural Language Processing
http://www.taln2014.org
July 1-4 2014
Marseille, FRANCE
IMPORTANT DATES
==========
1. Long paper
- Paper submission deadline : February 8, 2014 - Notification : March 29, 2014 - Camera ready paper due : May 2, 2014
2. Short paper
- Paper submission deadline : April 12, 2014 - Notification : May 10, 2014 - Camera ready paper due : May 26, 2014
3. Demonstrations
- Submission deadline : April 21, 2014 - Notification : May 10, 2014 - Camera ready paper due : May 26, 2014
PRÉSENTATION ============ Organized by the LPL (Laboratoire Parole et Langage) and the LIF (Laboratoire d’Informatique Fondamentale), the 21st Conference on Natural Language Processing (TALN) will take place from 1st to the 4th July at Faculté Saint Charles, Marseille (France).
TALN'2014 is organised under the aegis of ATALA (Association pour le Traitement Automatique des Langues) and will be held jointly with RECITAL'2014, the conference for young researchers (separated call for papers).
TALN'2014 will include oral presentations of research and position papers, posters, invited speakers and demonstrations. The official language is French. English presentations and papers are accepted for non-French-speaking authors.
TYPES OF COMMUNICATIONS ======================= Two communication formats are proposed: long papers (from 12 to 14 pages) and short papers (from 6 to 8 pages).
Authors are invited to submit two types of communications:
- original research work - position paper on the current state of the research work
Papers should present original works, with substantial new material when comparing to previous publications of the same author(s). Translation of previously published papers are not
There will be two presentation formats: Oral for long papers and Poster for short papers.
All topics of NLP are eligible for a submission.
SELECTION CRITERIA ================== Submissions will be reviewed by at least two experts of the domain. For research papers, decisions will be based on the following criteria:
- relevance to the conference topics - importance and originality of the paper - scientific and technical soundness - comparison of the results obtained with those found in relevant works - situation of the research in comparison with international work - clarity of the presentation
For position papers, decisions will be based on the following criteria:
- originality of the point of view presented - breadth of view and the taking into account of the state-of-the-art
The selected communications will be published in the conference proceedings.
The program committee will select one paper (TALN Best Paper) among the
accepted papers which will be recommended for publication (extended form) in
the journal 'Traitement Automatique des Langues' (T.A.L.).
SUBMISSION PROCEDURE ======================= Papers will be written in French for French-speaking authors or English for non-French-speaking authors.
A LaTeX style file and a Word template will be made available on the
conference website: http://wwwtaln2014.org
ORGANIZING COMMITEE ===================== Philippe Blache (Président) Carine André Frédéric Béchet Sébastien Bermond Brigitte Bigi Nadéra Bureau Cyril Deniaud Stéphanie Desous Benoît Favre Nuria Gala Joëlle Lavaud Grégoire Montcheuil Alexis Nasr Catherine Perrot Klim Peshkov Laurent Prévot Carlos Ramisch Stéphane Rauzy Claudia Starke
CONTACTS ======== philippe.blache[arobas]lpl-aix.fr nadera.bureau[arobas]lpl-aix.fr
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3-3-30 | (2014-07-06) Special Session on Computational Intelligence Algorithms for Digital Audio Applications, Beijing ChinaSpecial Session on Computational Intelligence Algorithms for Digital Audio Applications WCCI 2014 Special Session - Call for Papers 2014 IEEE World Congress on Computational Intelligence (WCCI 2014) Beijing, China,
July 6-11 2014.
www.ieee-wcci2014.org Theme and Scope of the Session ___________________________________________ Computational Intelligence (CI) is widely used to face complex modelling, prediction, and recognition tasks, and is largely addressed in different research fields. One of these, characterized by a mature orientation to market for many years already, is represented by Digital Audio, which finds application in diverse contexts like entertainment, security, and health. Scientists and technicians worldwide actively cooperate to develop new solutions and propose them for commercial exploitation, and, from this perspective, the employment of advanced CI techniques, in combination with suitable Digital Signal Processing algorithms, surely constitutes a plus. In particular, this is typically accomplished with the aim of extracting and manipulating useful information from the audio stream to pilot the execution of automatized services, also in an interactive fashion. This often happens in conjunction with data coming from other media, like textual and visual, for which specific and application-driven fusion techniques are needed (which also require the involvement of advanced CI algorithms). Several are the Digital Audio topics touched by such a paradigm. In digital music applications we have music transcription, onset detection, genre recognition, just to name a few. Then, moving to speech processing, speech/speaker recognition, speaker diarization, and source separation are surely representative subjects with a florid literature already. Furthermore, auditory scene analysis, acoustic monitoring and sound detection and identification have lately encountered a certain success in the scientific community and can be thus included in this illustrative list. In dealing with the problems correlated to these different topics, the adoption of data-driven learning systems is often a ``must''. This is not, however, immune to technological issues. Indeed, big amount of data frequently needs to be managed and processed, data which features can change over time due to the time-varying characteristics of the audio stream and of the acoustic environment. Moreover, in many applicative scenarios hard real-time processing constraints must be taken into account. It is indeed of great interest for the scientific community to understand how and to what extent novel CI techniques can be efficiently employed in Digital Audio, in the light of all aforementioned aspects. The aim of this session is therefore to offer a CI oriented look at the large variety of Digital Audio research topics and applications and to discuss the most recent technological efforts from this perspective. Topics ___________________________________________ Intelligent Audio Analysis Audio Information Retrieval Music Content Analysis and Understanding Speech and Speaker Analysis and Classification Cross-domain Audio Analysis Sound Detection and Identification Computational Auditory Scene Analysis Acoustic Monitoring Context-aware Audio Source Separation Intelligent Audio Interfaces Important Dates ___________________________________________ •20 December 2013: Due date for paper submission •15 March 2014: Notification to authors •15 April 2014: Camera-ready deadline for accepted papers •6-11 July 2013: Conference Days Organisers ___________________________________________ Stefano Squartini Università Politecnica delle Marche (Italy) s.squartini@univpm.it Aurelio Uncini Università La Sapienza (Italy) aurel@ieee.org Francesco Piazza Università Politecnica delle Marche (Italy) f.piazza@univpm.it Björn Schuller Imperial College London (UK), TUM (Germany) schuller@tum.de
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3-3-31 | (2014-07-19) Congrès Mondial de Linguistique Française at l’Université Libre de Berlin (Freie Universität Berlin) Congrès Mondial de Linguistique Française 2014 Organisé par l’
Institut de Linguistique Française (CNRS – FR 2393) du 19 au 23 juillet 2014, à l’Université Libre de Berlin (Freie Universität Berlin) APPEL A COMMUNICATIONS Dates : 19 au 23 juillet 2014 Lieu : Université Libre de Berlin Site web : http://www.ilf.cnrs.fr/, rubrique Congrès Mondial de Linguistique Française Contact
Intérêt scientifique Le quatrième Congrès Mondial de Linguistique Française est organisé par l’Institut de Linguistique Française (ILF), Fédération de Recherche du CNRS (FR 2393) qui est sous la tutelle de cet organisme et du Ministère de l’Enseignement Supérieur et de la Recherche. L’ILF regroupe dix-sept laboratoires de recherche, qui sont les co-organisateurs de ce congrès en partenariat avec de nombreuses associations nationales et internationales. Une telle organisation, conjointement prise en charge par dix-sept unités de recherche, est exceptionnelle par son ampleur et la volonté de partenariat scientifique qu’elle révèle. Le premier Congrès Mondial a été organisé à Paris par l’ILF en 2008, le deuxième à La Nouvelle-Orléans, le troisième à Lyon en 2012. Chacun de ces trois congrès a attiré plus de 300 participants et les résultats ont fait l’objet d’une publication en ligne immédiate accompagnée par un volume de résumés et un CD-ROM d’actes. Ce congrès est organisé sans aucun privilège d'école ou d'orientation et sans exclusive théorique ou conceptuelle. Chaque domaine ou sous-domaine, chaque type d'objet, chaque type de questionnement et chaque problématique portant sur le français peut y trouver sa place. Le CMLF est organisé en 15 sessions, lesquelles soulignent le fait que la linguistique française n’est pas limitée à tel ou tel domaine érigé en modèle pour les autres sousdisciplines du champ. Quatorze thématiques ont été retenues, qui permettent de balayer la plus grande partie du champ scientifique : (1) Histoire du français : perspectives diachronique et synchronique, (2) Linguistique et Didactique (français langue première, français langue seconde), (3) Discours, Pragmatique et Interaction, (4) Francophonie, (5) Histoire, Épistémologie, Réflexivité, (6) Lexique(s), (7) Linguistique de l’écrit, Linguistique du texte, Sémiotique, Stylistique, (8) Morphologie, (9) Phonétique, Phonologie et Interfaces, (10) Psycholinguistique et Acquisition, (11) Sémantique, (12) Sociolinguistique, Dialectologies et Écologie des langues, (13) Syntaxe, (14) Ressources et Outils pour l’analyse linguistique. A ces quatorze thématiques a été ajoutée une quinzième session « pluri-thématique », laissant ouverte la possibilité de travailler dans plusieurs domaines, voire en marge des territoires disciplinaires traditionnels. Chaque thématique est pilotée par un Président et coordonnée par un Vice-président (membre du Comité directeur de l’ILF, ou bien choisi par ce comité). Les comités scientifiques comportent une proportion équilibrée de spécialistes français et étrangers. Un soin particulier a été accordé à la sélection des comités afin de s’assurer qu’ils présenteraient les plus grandes garanties scientifiques pour le succès du congrès. On trouve donc dans chaque comité des linguistes connu(e)s mondialement pour leur contribution au domaine. Le rôle de ces comités est de sélectionner les propositions de communications. Les soumissions se feront sous la forme de brefs articles de 10 à 15 pages. Toutes les communications (y compris les conférences plénières) seront publiées sous la forme d'un article de 10 à 15 pages dans les actes du congrès (sous forme de CD-ROM accompagnant un livret des titres et des résumés des communications) et maintenues sous forme électronique sur le site du CMLF. L'archive électronique restera accessible après le congrès.
Rappel du calendrier • 15 mai 2013 : Ouverture de la plateforme de dépôt des propositions de communications • 30 novembre 2013 : Date limite de réception des propositions de communication • 25 février 2014 : Notification de l'acceptation ou du refus et directives pour la version définitive • 25 mars 2014 : Réception de la version définitive des articles • Congrès Mondial de Linguistique Française : du 19 au 23 juillet 2014
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3-3-32 | (2014-07-25) 14th Conference on Laboratory Phonology (LabPhon 14), Tokyo, Japan. The 14th Conference on Laboratory Phonology (LabPhon 14) will be held from 25 to 27 July at the National Institute for Japanese Linguistics (NINJAL) in Tokyo, Japan. For more details, see its official website, which is now open: http://www.ninjal.ac.jp/labphon14/
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3-3-33 | (2014-09-01) 22nd European Signal Processing Conference (EUSIPCO 2014) Lisbon, PortugalThe 22nd European Signal Processing Conference September 1 – 5, 2014, Lisbon, Portugal http://www.eusipco2014.org/ ============================================================== Deadline for the submission of Full Papers: FEBRUARY 17, 2014 ============================================================== EUSIPCO 2014 will be held on September 1- 5, 2014, in Lisbon, Portugal. This is one of the largest international conferences in the field of signal processing and will address all the latest developments in research and technology. The conference will bring together individuals from academia, industry, regulation bodies, and government, to exchange and discuss ideas in all the areas and applications of signal processing. EUSIPCO 2014 will feature world-class keynote speakers, special sessions, plenary talks, tutorials, and technical sessions. We invite the submission of original, unpublished technical papers on signal processing topics, including but not limited to: • Audio and acoustic signal processing • Design and implementation of signal processing systems • Multimedia signal processing • Speech processing • Image and video processing • Machine learning • Signal estimation and detection • Sensor array and multichannel signal processing • Signal processing for communications including wireless and optical communications and networking • Signal processing for location, positioning and navigation • Nonlinear signal processing • Signal processing applications including health and biosciences Submitted papers must be camera-ready and no more than five pages long, and conforming to the format that will soon be specified on the EUSIPCO website (http://www.eusipco2014.org/ ). ============================================================== Best Paper Awards ============================================================== Two “EUSIPCO best young author paper awards” will be given at the dinner banquet of EUSIPCO 2014 to the two best papers from authors under the age of 30. ============================================================== Important Dates ============================================================== Proposal for special sessions: December 9, 2013 Proposal for tutorials: February 17, 2014 Electronic submission of full papers: February 17, 2014 Notification of acceptance: May 26, 2014 Submission of camera-ready papers and copyright forms: June 23, 2014 _______________________________________________
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3-3-34 | (2014-09-10) CfP 3ème SWIP - Swiss Workshop on Prosody, Université de Genève, Switzerland Appel à communications
3ème SWIP - Swiss Workshop on Prosody
Special Theme : PhonoGenres and Speaking Styles
10-11 Septembre 2014 - Université de Genève
SWIP (Swiss Workshop on Prosody) est un évènement annuel sur les
avancées de recherches en prosodie, organisé en Suisse. Après le
1er SWIP à Zurich en 2012, et le 2ème à Neuchâtel en 2013, le
3ème SWIP aura lieu à Genève les 10 et 11 septembre 2014. Pour
cette édition, la thématique principale porte sur les phonogenres
et les styles de parole. Elle marquera la clôture des trois ans
du projet FNS 'Caractérisation prosodique et linguistique de
phonogenres'.
La variation phonostylistique prosodique, qu’elle soit régionale,
sociale, ou situationnelle, fait aujourd’hui l’objet de nombreuses
études. Elles sont ponctuelles ou systématiques, empiriquement
fondées sur l’étude phonétique-phonologique de corpus de grandes
dimensions ou sur l’examen d’échantillons restreints. Les approches
sont variées, entre les méthodologies systématiques et des
procédures ad hoc. Ainsi, l’un des objectifs principaux de la
conférence est de répertorier les différentes approches et de
confronter leurs résultats.
Les thèmes suivants peuvent être abordés:
*phonogenres: dimensions phonético-prosodiques; variation
situationnelle, communicative, micro- ou macro-sociale; analyses
comparatives
*styles de parole - clichés, idiosyncrasies, particularités
remarquables
*variation diachronique des phonostyles
*identification des genres et des styles de discours
*méthodologies et outils de traitement de corpus, avec un intérêt
particulier pour l’étude phonostylistique et la variation
phonostylistique
Les contributions en dehors de ces thèmes sont également les bienvenues.
Conférenciers Invités
Julia Hirschberg
Philippe Boula de Mareüil
Format de soumission
La soumission de la contribution consiste en deux étapes.
Dans un premier temps, nous attendons pour le 1er février 2014
les propositions de contribution (une page + références) en français,
ou en anglais. La soumission se fait au moyen de cette page EasyChair.
Dans un deuxième temps, nous attendons pour le 1er juin 2014 la version
définitive de l'article, en version courte (6 pages max., environ 2000 mots)
ou longue (12 pages max., environ 4000 mots) en vue d'une publication dans
les Nouveaux cahiers de linguistique française (papier et format
électronique), à paraître pour le colloque. Les articles peuvent être
rédigés en français ou en anglais avec un résumé dans l'autre langue.
La mise en forme doit impérativement suivre ces consignes.
Veuillez noter que la langue de la conférence est l'anglais.
Dates à retenir
Soumission de la contribution : 1er février 2014
Notification d’acceptation: 1er mars 2014
Envoi de l'article complet pour les actes : 1er juin 2014
Dates de la conférence: 10-11 septembre 2014
Comité scientifique
Antoine Auchlin
Mathieu Avanzi
Philippe Boula de Mareüil
Nick Campbell
Elisabeth Delais-Roussarie
Céline De Looze
Volker Dellwo
Jean-Philippe Goldman
Julia Hirschberg
Daniel Hirst
Ingrid Hove
Adrian Leemann
Joaquim Llisterri
Philippe Martin
Piet Mertens
Anne Lacheret
Nicolas Obin
Tea Pršir
Stephan Schmid
Sandra Schwab
Elizabeth Shriberg
Anne Catherine Simon
Comité d'organisation
Antoine Auchlin
Jean-Philippe Goldman Tea Pršir
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3-3-35 | (2014-12-01) CfP IEEE Global Conference on Signal and Information Processing - Atlanta Georgia 2014 Technical Program Chairs: Douglas Williams, Timothy Davidson, and Ghassan AlRegib The IEEE Global Conference on Signal and Information Processing (GlobalSIP) is a recently launched flagship conference of the IEEE Signal Processing Society. GlobalSIP’14 will be held in Atlanta, Georgia, USA, during the week of December 1, 2014. The conference will focus broadly on signal and information processing with an emphasis on up-and-coming signal processing themes. The conference will feature world-class speakers, tutorials, exhibits, and technical sessions consisting of poster or oral presentations. GlobalSIP’14 will be comprised of colocated symposia selected competitively based on responses to this call-for-symposium proposals. Symposium topics may include, but are not limited to:
Symposium proposals should include the title of the symposium; length of the symposium (one day or two days); projected selectivity of the symposium; paper length requirements (submission: from 2 to 6 pages, final: 4-6 pages, invited papers may be longer); names, addresses, and short CVs (up to 250 words) of the organizers, including the general organizers and the technical chairs; an up-to two page description of the technical issues that the symposium will address (including timeliness and relevance to the signal processing community; names of (potential) technical program committee members; name of (potential) invited speakers (up to 2 for one-day symposia and 4 for two-day ones)); and a draft call-for-papers. Please package everything in a single pdf file. More detailed information can be found at http://renyi.ece.iastate.edu/globalsip2014/cfs.html Symposium proposals should be emailed to Doug Williams (doug.williams@ece.gatech.edu) and Geoffrey Li (liye@ece.gatech.edu) according the following timeline: November 8, 2013: Symposium proposals due Tentative timeline for paper submission:
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3-3-36 | (2014-12-23) CfP International Conference on Human Machine Interaction, New Delhi IndiaCall for papersInternational Conference on Human Machine Interaction 2014 23 – 25, December 2014 http://intconfhmi.com In association with SETIT, Sfax University, Tunisia. and ASDF (Association of Scientists, Developers and Faculties) Chennai Chapter, we will organize the International Conference HMI 2014 which will be held in New delhi -INDIA. Human Machine Interaction (HMI), is a main annual research conference aimed at presenting current research being carried out. The idea of the conference is for the scientists, scholars, engineers and students from the Universities all around the world and the industry to present ongoing research activities, and hence to foster research relations between the Universities and the industry. HMI 2014 is co-sponsored by Association of Scientists, Developers and Faculties and SETIT, Sfax University, Tunisia and technical co-sponsored by many other universities and institutes. Area of Submission
Topics of interest for HMI is widely declared for the above, but not limited to. Conference Registration Fees Rebate (Discount)We are pleased to inform you that the organizing committee of the HMI2014 allocates a financial support for all participants from developing or emerging countries. This Financial support of among of 150 Dollars is available to help participants to attend HMI2014 You can find more details in: http://intconfhmi.com/register.html
We are waiting for seeing you in India. NB : A select number of Post Conference Excursions will take place during 5 days. As examples : 1 Day Tour to Taj Mahal, Agra Fort, Mathura in AC Bus : 25 $ per person 1 Day Tour to Qutub Minar, Parliament, Lotus Temple, India Gate, Gandhi Smiriti, Red Fort, Humayun's Tomb, Rajghat: 25 $ per person
Best Regards Mohamed Salim BOUHLEL General Co-Chair, HMI2014 Head of Research Unit: Sciences & Technologies of Image and Telecommunications ( Sfax University ) GSM +216 20 200005
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3-3-37 | Announcing the Master of Science in Intelligent Information Systems Carnegie Mellon University
degree designed for students who want to rapidly master advanced content-analysis, mining, and intelligent information technologies prior to beginning or resuming leadership careers in industry and government. Just over half of the curriculum consists of graduate courses. The remainder provides direct, hands-on, project-oriented experience working closely with CMU faculty to build systems and solve problems using state-of-the-art algorithms, techniques, tools, and datasets. A typical MIIS student completes the program in one year (12 months) of full-time study at the Pittsburgh campus. Part-time and distance education options are available to students employed at affiliated companies. The application deadline for the Fall 2013 term is December 14, 2012. For more information about the program, please visit http://www.lti.cs.cmu.edu/education/msiis/overview.shtml
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3-3-38 | Master in linguistics (Aix-Marseille) France Master's in Linguistics (Aix-Marseille Université): Linguistic Theories, Field Linguistics and Experimentation TheLiTEx offers advanced training in Linguistics. This specialty focuses Linguistics is aimed at presenting in an original way the links between corpus linguistics and scientific experimentation on the one hand and laboratory and field methodologies on the other. On the basis of a common set of courses (offered within the first year), TheLiTEx offers two paths: Experimental Linguistics (LEx) and Language Contact & Typology (LCT) The goal of LEx is the study of language, speech and discourse on the basis of scientific experimentation, quantitative modeling of linguistic phenomena and behavior. It focuses on a multidisciplinary approach which borrows its methodologies to human physical and biological sciences and its tools to computer science, clinical approaches, engineering etc.. Among the courses offered: semantics, phonetics / phonology, morphology, syntax or pragmatics, prosody and intonation, and the interfaces between these linguistic levels, in their interactions with the real world and the individual, in a biological, cognitive and social perspective. Within the second year, a set of more specialized courses is offered such as Language and the Brain and Laboratory Phonology. LCT aims at understanding the world's linguistic diversity, focusing on language contact, language change and variation (European, Asian and African languages, Creoles, sign language, etc.).. This specialty focuses, from a a linguistic and sociolinguistic perspective, on issues of field linguistics and taking into account both the human and socio-cultural dimension of language (speakers, communities). It also focuses on documenting rare and endangered languages and to engage a reflection on linguistic minorities. This path also provides expertise and intervention models (language policy and planning) in order to train students in the management of contact phenomena and their impact on the speakers, languages and societies More info at: http://thelitex.hypotheses.org/678
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3-3-39 | Research in Interactive Virtual Experiences at USC CA USA REU Site: Research in Interactive Virtual Experiences --------------------------------------------------------------------
The Institute for Creative Technologies (ICT) offers a 10-week summer research program for undergraduates in interactive virtual experiences. A multidisciplinary research institute affiliated with the University of Southern California, the ICT was established in 1999 to combine leading academic researchers in computing with the creative talents of Hollywood and the video game industry. Having grown to encompass a total of 170 faculty, staff, and students in a diverse array of fields, the ICT represents a unique interdisciplinary community brought together with a core unifying mission: advancing the state-of-the-art for creating virtual reality experiences so compelling that people will react as if they were real.
Reflecting the interdisciplinary nature of ICT research, we welcome applications from students in computer science, as well as many other fields, such as psychology, art/animation, interactive media, linguistics, and communications. Undergraduates will join a team of students, research staff, and faculty in one of several labs focusing on different aspects of interactive virtual experiences. In addition to participating in seminars and social events, students will also prepare a final written report and present their projects to the rest of the institute at the end of summer research fair.
Students will receive $5000 over ten weeks, plus an additional $2800 stipend for housing and living expenses. Non-local students can also be reimbursed for travel up to $600. The ICT is located in West Los Angeles, just north of LAX and only 10 minutes from the beach.
This Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) site is supported by a grant from the National Science Foundation. The site is expected to begin summer 2013, pending final award issuance.
Students can apply online at: http://ict.usc.edu/reu/ Application deadline: March 31, 2013
For more information, please contact Evan Suma at reu@ict.usc.edu.
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